Iran-backed Hezbollah steps in to support Iraqi militias after Soleimani’s death
Shortly after Iranian Major General Qassem Soleimani
was killed in a US drone strike in Iraq, the Tehran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah
group urgently met with Iraqi militia leaders, seeking to unite them in the
face of a huge void left by their powerful mentor’s death, two sources with
knowledge of the meetings told Reuters.
The meetings were meant to coordinate the political
efforts of Iraq’s often-fractious militias, which lost not only Soleimani but
also Abu Mahdi al-Mohandes, a unifying Iraqi paramilitary commander, in the
January 3 attack at Baghdad airport, the sources said.
While offering few details, two additional sources
in a pro-Iran regional alliance confirmed that Hezbollah, which is sanctioned
as a terrorist group by the United States, has stepped in to help fill the void
left by Soleimani in guiding the militias. All sources in this article spoke on
condition of anonymity to address sensitive political activities rarely
addressed in public. Officials with the governments of Iraq and Iran did not
respond to requests for comment, nor did a spokesperson for the militia groups.
The discussions shed light on how Iran and its
allied groups are trying to cement control in the unstable Middle East,
especially in the wake of the devastating US attack on a revered Iranian
military leader.
The Tehran-backed militias are critical to Iran’s
efforts to maintain control over Iraq, where the US still maintains some 5,000
troops. The country has experienced years of civil war since US forces toppled
Saddam Hussein and more recently, the government - and the militias - have
faced growing protests against Iran’s influence in the country. Iran helped
found some Iraqi militia groups.
In the months ahead of his death, Soleimani had
waded ever deeper into the Iraq crisis, holding meetings with the Iraqi
militias in Baghdad as Tehran sought to defend its allies and interests in its
power struggle with the United States, one of the two Iraqi sources said.
Hezbollah’s involvement marks an expansion of its
role in the region. The Shi’ite group, founded by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards
in 1982, has been at the heart of Iran’s regional strategy for years, helping
Soleimani to train paramilitary groups in both Iraq and Syria.
One pro-Iran regional official said Hezbollah’s
guidance of the militias would continue until the new leadership in the Quds
Force – a unit of the Revolutionary Guards led by Soleimani since 1998 – gets a
handle on the political crisis in Iraq.
The meetings between Hezbollah and Iraqi militia
leaders began in January, just days after Soleimani’s assassination, the two
Iraqi sources said. Reuters couldn’t confirm the number of meetings or where
they took place. One source said they were in Beirut and the other said they
were either in Lebanon or Iran.
Sheikh Mohammad al-Kawtharani, the Hezbollah
representative in Iraq who worked closely with Soleimani for years to guide the
Iraqi militias, hosted the meetings, the Iraqi sources said.
Kawtharani picked up where Soleimani left off, the
Iraqi sources said. The sources said Kawtharani berated the groups, as
Soleimani had done in one of his final meetings with them, for failing to come
up with a unified plan to contain popular protests against the Baghdad
government and the paramilitaries that dominate it. The government and militia
groups have killed hundreds of protesters but not managed to contain the
rebellion.
Kawatharani also urged a united front in picking a
new Iraqi prime minister, the Iraqi sources said. Since then, former Iraqi
communications minister Mohammed Tawfiq Allawi has been named - a development
welcomed by Iran and accepted by the militia-linked parties it backs but
opposed by protesters.
Big shoes to fill
For now, Kawtharani is seen as the most suitable
figure to direct Iraqi militias until a permanent Iranian successor can be
chosen, although he possesses nowhere near Soleimani’s clout and charisma,
according to the two Iraqi sources and a senior Iraqi Shi’ite Muslim leader.
“Kawtharani has connections with the militia
groups,” the Shi’ite leader said, noting that he was born in Najaf, lived in
Iraq for decades and speaks Iraqi dialect. “He was trusted by Soleimani, who
used to depend and call on him to help him in crises and in meetings in
Baghdad.”
One of the Iraqi sources close to the militias said
that Kawtharani also met with the Iraqi populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, a
powerful but unpredictable figure, to convince him to support the new Iraqi
prime minister. As Reuters has reported, Sadr has given Allawi his support.
Kawtharani will face serious - perhaps
insurmountable- challenges in filling the shoes of the leaders killed in the
drone attack, the Iraqi sources close to the militias told Reuters.
“A lot of faction leaders see themselves as too big
and important to take orders from,” one Iraqi source said. “For now, because of
pressure from Iran, they’re cooperating with him, but I doubt that will
continue and the Iranians know that.”
One of the pro-Iran sources, a military commander,
said Hezbollah’s involvement would consist of political guidance but stop short
of providing manpower and materiel to retaliate for the Solemani killing. The
militias “do not need Hezbollah’s intervention because they have the strength
in numbers, combat experience, and firepower,” the commander said.
Those groups are difficult to control while
Hezbollah is seen as more disciplined. But like the rest of Iran’s network,
Hezbollah risks stretching itself thin, a senior US official in the region and
an Iraqi political leader said.
In recent years, Hezbollah’s role has grown
considerably. It has fought in support of President Bashar Al-Assad in Syria
and extended political support to the Iran-allied Houthis of Yemen in their war
with a Saudi-led military alliance.
Iran is likely to rely partly on the clout
Nasrallah, a figure who commands deep respect among Iran’s allies across the
region, the US official said. Nasrallah is seen as overseeing Kawtharani’s
efforts, according to a senior Shi’ite Iraqi leader.
“I think ideologically, religiously, he’s seen as a
charismatic figure to many of the Iraqi Shia militias,” the US official said,
requesting anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record.
In two lengthy televised addresses, Nasrallah has
paid homage to Soleimani and vowed to avenge his death.
He has also declared it a goal of Hezbollah and its
allies to eject US forces from the region once and for all. US forces have been
in Iraq since 2014 as part of a coalition fighting against Islamic State.
If the Iraqi militias have their way, sources close
to them say, these troops will be the first to depart.