IMIS Refuse to Merge, Alarming Baghdad
Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi’s decree gave Iran-backed militias, which have wielded increasing power in Iraq, a month to fully integrate with the armed forces, leave checkpoints and sever ties with political groups.
Brigade 30’s refusal to abandon its positions on the eastern edge of Mosul — instead it cut off roads and whipped up angry protests — underlines Baghdad’s struggle to assert its authority and raises the risk of further instability in a region marked by US-Iranian rivalry.
Washington warned this year it would take action against Iran-backed militias if Baghdad failed to control them, and imposed sanctions on groups and their leaders, including Brigade 30’s Commander Waad Qaddo. It blamed paramilitaries affiliated with IMIS for attacks on bases hosting US forces in May.
Tension ramped up in the past month when alleged Israeli airstrikes hit weapons depots and bases of IMIS in western and central Iraq. Israel has hinted it was involved but has not explicitly said so. The Israeli military declined to comment.
Rivalry between Iraq’s two biggest allies, Tehran and Washington, has put the region on edge this year. Oil tankers in the Gulf have been attacked and Israel has bombed Iranian allies in Syria.
If Iraq cannot rein in its militias, which have more than 100,000 members, there could be further violence, Iraqi officials and analysts say.
In parts of Salahuddin province, north of Baghdad, flags of some factions still fly at checkpoints and paramilitaries man roadblocks in neighboring Anbar province.
The armed groups dominate local security in some towns and cities across the country, especially territory formerly occupied by ISIS. Their allies, meanwhile, occupy parliamentary seats, exercising new political strength that has deepened their influence on the government.
“Abdul Mahdi failed... to make a small group leave its positions near Mosul. It raises the question, what could he do against more powerful Iran-backed groups?” said Baghdad-based security analyst Jasim al-Bahadli.
In an interview with local journalists broadcast on Aug. 9, Abdul Mahdi said the integration was complicated and would take more time.
In Baghdad, IMIS factions influence is growing through new senior military appointments, security sources and analysts say. A commander from one IMIS group was appointed inspector-general of the defense ministry this month.
The retirement in May of the military’s Mosul commander – a US ally since the fight against ISIS – has made it easier to resist government efforts to bring paramilitaries in line, sources with knowledge of the appointments said.
Abdul Mahdi set a July 31 deadline for IMIS factions to integrate with the armed forces, including handing over roadblocks.
IMIS chief Falih al-Fayyadh said last month most factions were already complying.
Analysts say Brigade 30, like other groups that took territory in northern Iraq as they fought ISIS, is reluctant to give up power.
The faction, controlled by Iraq’s Shiite Shabak minority, is one of a number of paramilitary groups in Iraq’s northern Nineveh province believed to control parts of the local economy. The IMIS have denied its members are involved in trade.
“Brigade 30 have gained quite a bit of leverage in Mosul... they feel like they made some good gains during the fight and are now being told to give up major checkpoints,” said Renad Mansour, a research fellow at Chatham House.
Commander Waad Qaddo’s office declined to comment. Washington placed him on a sanctions list in July over alleged human rights abuses and corruption.
In response to Abdul Mahdi’s decree, Qaddo’s group bulldozed dirt barriers onto a highway leading into Iraq’s second-largest city in early August. Supporters blocked roads and burned tires as the army stood by.
Demonstrating the group’s political heft, IMIS top leadership negotiated joint checkpoint control between Brigade 30, the army and local officials.