Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq

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Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq
عصائب أهل الحق
LeaderQais al-Khazali
FoundedJuly 2006 (2006-07)
IdeologyShia Jihadism
Wilayat al Faqih[1] Khomeinism[2]
Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr thought[3]
Anti-Zionism[4]
Anti-Americanism[5]
Pan-Islamism[6]
Anti-West[7]
Anti-LGBT[8][9] (alleged)
Kazem al-Haeri thought[10]
ReligionShia Islam
National affiliationFatah Alliance
International affiliationAxis of Resistance
Colours    White, Green
Seats in the Council of Representatives:
15 / 329
[11]
  • Politics of Iraq
  • Political parties
  • Elections
Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq (AAH)
LeadersQais al-Khazali
Akram al-Kaabi (2007–2010)
SpokesmanNaeem al-Aboudi[12]
Jawad al-Talabawi (military)[13]
Dates of operationJuly 2006
Split fromSadrist Movement (Mahdi Army)
Allegiance Iraq (2014–present)[14]
Group(s)See section
HeadquartersSadr City, Baghdad, Iraq
Active regionsMainly Baghdad and Southern Iraq; also active in Iraq's Central regions and Syria
Size10,000[15][16]
Part ofSpecial Groups
Popular Mobilization Forces
AlliesState allies
  •  Syria
  •  Iran

Non-state allies

 Hezbollah[3]

OpponentsState opponents

Non-state opponents

Battles and warsIraq War
  • Karbala provincial headquarters raid
  • Operation Together Forward
  • Siege of Sadr City
  • Siege of U.K. bases in Basra
  • Iraq spring fighting of 2008
  • Battle of Basra[citation needed]

Iraqi Civil War (2014–2017)[31]

  • Lifting of the Siege of Amirli[32][33]
  • Operation Ashura[34][35]
  • Battle of Baiji (2014)[36]
  • Liberation of Jurf Al Sakhar[37]
  • Second Battle of Tikrit[38]
  • Siege of Fallujah
  • Hawija offensive (2017)[39]
  • Battle of Mosul (2016)

Syrian Civil War

Designated as a terrorist group by United States[41][42]
 United Arab Emirates[43]
Websitehttp://ahlualhaq.com

Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq (AAH; Arabic: عصائب أهل الحقAṣaʾib ʾAhl al-Haqq, "League of the Righteous"), also known as the Khazali Network, is an Iraqi Shi'a political party and paramilitary group active in the Iraqi insurgency and Syrian Civil War.[44][45] During the Iraq War it was known as Iraq's largest "Special Group" (the Americans' term for Iran-backed Shia paramilitaries in Iraq), and is now part of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), a group of Shi’ite militias that are close to Iran.[46]

AAH was funded and trained by Iran's Quds Force.[47][48] Members of AAH, as part of PMF, receive Iraqi government salaries[citation needed] after the PMF units were officially integrated into Iraqi security forces in 2018.[citation needed]

AAH has claimed responsibility for over 6,000 attacks on American and Coalition forces.[49] In 2017, AAH created a party with the same name.[50]

On 3 January 2020, the U.S. Department of State announced its intent to designate AAH a terrorist organization along with two of its leaders,[51] Qais al-Khazali and his brother Laith al-Khazali, who were designated Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGT).[52]

History[]

Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq split from the Sadrist Movement in 2004.[49] Qais al-Khazali split from Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army after the Shi'a uprising in 2004 to create his own Khazali network. When the Mahdi Army signed a cease-fire with the government and the Americans and the fighting stopped, Khazali continued fighting, and during the battle Khazali was already issuing his own orders to militiamen without Muqtada al-Sadr's approval. The group's leadership (which includes Khazali, (a politician in Muqtada al-Sadr's Sadr Movement) and Akram al-Kaabi), however, reconciled with al-Sadr in mid-2005. In July 2006, Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq was founded and became one of the Special Groups which operated more independently from the rest of the Mahdi Army. It became a completely independent organisation after the Mahdi Army's disbanding after the 2008 Shi'a uprising.[53] In July 2006, A part of AAH fought alongside Hezbollah in 2006 Lebanon War against Israel.[3] In November 2008 when Sadr created the Promised Day Brigade to succeed the Mahdi Army, he asked AAH (and other Special Groups) to join, but they declined.[54]

AAH has claimed responsibility for over 6,000 attacks in Iraq[49] including the October 10, 2006 attack on Camp Falcon, the assassination of the American military commander in Najaf, the May 6, 2006 downing of a British Lynx helicopter and the October 3, 2007 attack on the Polish ambassador.[55] Their most known attack, however, is the January 20, 2007 Karbala provincial headquarters raid where they infiltrated the U.S. Army's offices at Karbala, killed one soldier, then abducted and killed four more American soldiers. After the raid, the U.S. military launched a crackdown on AAH and the raid's mastermind Azhar al-Dulaimi was killed in Baghdad, while much of the group's leadership including the brothers Qais and and Lebanese Hezbollah member Ali Musa Daqduq who was Khazali's advisor was in charge of their relations with Hezbollah. After these arrests in 2007, Akram al-Kaabi, who had been the military commander of the Mahdi Army until May 2007, led the organisation.[53] In May 2007, AAH kidnapped British IT expert Peter Moore and his four bodyguards. They demanded the release of all their fighters being imprisoned by the Iraqi authorities and US military in return for his release.[citation needed] His four bodyguards were killed, but Moore himself was released when AAH's leader Qais al-Khazali was released in January 2010.[56] Prior to Qazali's release, security forces had already released over 100 of the group's members including Laith al-Khazali.[57] In 2008 many of the groups fighters and leaders fled to Iran after the Iraqi Army was allowed to re-take control of Sadr City and the Mahdi Army was disbanded. Here most fighters were re-trained in new tactics. It resulted in a major lull in the group's activity from May to July 2008.[53]

In February 2010, AAH kidnapped DoD civilian Issa T. Salomi, a naturalized American from Iraq. This was the first high-profile kidnapping of a foreigner in Iraq since the kidnapping of Peter Moore (which was also done by AAH). Salomi was released in March 2010 in return for the release of four AAH fighters being held in Iraqi custody.[58] In total 450 members of AAH have been handed over from US to Iraqi custody since the kidnapping of Peter Moore, over 250 of which have been released by the Iraqi authorities.[59]

On July 21, 2010 General Ray Odierno said Iran was supporting three Shiite extremist groups in Iraq that had been attempting to attack US bases. One of the groups was AAH and the other two were the Promised Day Brigade and Ketaib Hezbollah.[60]

In December 2010 it was reported that notorious Shi'a militia commanders such as Abu Deraa and Mustafa al-Sheibani were returning from Iran to work with AAH.[61] Iranian Grand Ayatollah Kazem al-Haeri was identified as the group's spiritual leader.[62]

In August and September 2012, AAH started a poster campaign in which they distributed over 20,000 posters of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Sayyid Ali Khamenei throughout Iraq. A senior official in Baghdad's local government said municipal workers were afraid to take the posters down in fear of retribution by AAH militiamen.[63]

Iraq protests, 2018–present[]

In late 2018, protests in Basra, Iraq saw several Iran-related organizations being targeted.[64] Among the damage caused by protesters were several AAH offices which were set on fire.[64]

In October 2019, AAH militia opened fire on protesters trying to set fire to the group's office in Nasiriya, killing at least nine protesters.[65]

On 3 January 2020, the United States Department of State announced its intent to designate AAH a terrorist organization along with two of its leaders.[51] Qais al-Khazali and his brother were designated Specially Designated Global Terrorists.[66][52]

Syrian Civil War[]

AAH's Syrian branch is called the Haidar al-Karar Brigades, and led by Akram al-Kaabi, AAH's military leader stationed in Aleppo.[67] al-Kaabi is also the founder and leader of the militant group Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba.

The group initially fought under the banner of al-Abbas Brigade (a mixed Syrian, Iraqi and Lebanese Shia organization), but split in 2014 following a dispute with al-Abbas's native Syrian fighters.[67][68] Like other Iraqi Shia paramilitaries in Syria, they fight in defense of the Sayyidah Zainab shrine.[48]

Iraq elections[]

AAH took part in the 2014 Iraqi parliamentary election as part of the Al-Sadiqoun Bloc. An electoral meeting of estimated 100,000 supporters of Al-Sadiqoun was marred by violence as a series of bombs exploded at the campaign rally held at the Industrial Stadium in eastern Baghdad killing at least 37 people and wounding scores others, according to Iraqi police.[69] The group organizers had planned to announce at the rally the names of its candidates for the parliamentary election. At the election, the Al-Sadiquun Bloc won just one seat out of 328 seats in the Iraqi Parliament.

AAH took part in the 2018 Iraqi parliamentary election as part of the Fatah Alliance.

Strength[]

AAH's strength was estimated at about 3,000 fighters in March 2007.[70] In July 2011, however, officials estimated there were less than 1,000 AAH militiamen left in Iraq.[71] The group is alleged to receive some $5 million worth of cash and weapons every month from Iran.[71] In January 2012, following the American withdrawal from Iraq in December 2011, Qais al-Khazali declared the United States was defeated and that now the group was prepared to disarm and join the political process.[72]

Since the beginning of the Iraqi war against ISIL, AAH has grown to around 10,000 members[15][16] and been described as one of if not the most powerful members of the Popular Mobilization Forces.[31][33][73] It has recruited hundreds of Sunni fighters to fight against ISIS.[74]

Funding[]

The group alleged receives training and weapons from Iran's Revolutionary Guards' Quds Force as well as Iranian-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah. By March 2007, Iran was providing the network between $750,000 and $3 million in arms and financial support each month. Abu Mustafa al-Sheibani, a former Badr Brigades member who ran an important smuggling network known as the Sheibani Network played a key role in supplying the group. The group was also supplied by a smuggling network headed by [75] a former Mahdi Army commander, mostly active in Maysan Governorate.[76]

Organisational structure[]

As of 2006 AAH had at least four major operational branches:[53]

  • The – Responsible for Southern Iraq (Iraq's 9 Shi'a governorates: Babil, al-Basrah, Dhi Qar, al-Karbala, Maysan, al-Muthanna, an Najaf, al-Qadisiyyah and Wasit Governorates)
  • The – Responsible for West-Baghdad (mainly the Shi'a Kadhimiya and Al Rashid districts but also some minor activity in the mixed Karkh district and the mainly Sunni Mansour district)
  • The – Responsible for East-Baghdad (mainly the Shi'a Thawra, Nissan and Karrada districts but with some minor activity in the mixed Rusafa district and the mainly Sunni Adhamiyah district)
  • The – Responsible for Central Iraq (mainly active the Shi'a areas in Southern Diyala, Samarra City (in Salah ad-Din Governorate) and some Shi'a enclaves in Nineveh and Kirkuk Governorates)
  • The Haidar al-Karar Brigades – Responsible for Syria, mainly Southern Damascus and West Aleppo.[67]

Others[]

  • 41st Brigade[77]
  • 42nd Brigade Quwat Liwa al-Shaheed al-Qa'id Abu Mousa al-Amiri[77]
  • 43rd Brigade[77]

See also[]

  • Belligerents in the Syrian Civil War
  • List of armed groups in the Iraqi Civil War
  • Private militias in Iraq
  • Holy Shrine Defender

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External links[]

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