Iraq
May Seek "Direct Military Intervention From Russia" To
Expel Turkish Troops
6
December, 2015
Turkey
just can’t seem to help itself when it comes to escalations in the
Mid-East.
First,
Erdogan intentionally reignited the conflict between Ankara and the
PKK in an effort scare the public into nullifying a democratic
election outcome. Then, the Turks shot down a Russian warplane near
the Syrian border. Finally, in what very well might be an effort to
protect Islamic State oil smuggling routes, Erdogan sent 150 troops
and two dozen tanks to Bashiqa, just northeast of Mosul in a move
that has infuriated Baghdad.
We
discussed the troop deployment at length on Saturday in “Did Turkey
Just Invade Iraq To Protect Erdogan's ISIS Oil Smuggling Routes?,”
and you’re encouraged to review the analysis in its entirety, but
here was our conclusion:
The backlash underscores the fact that Iraq does not want help from NATO when it comes to fighting ISIS. Iraqis generally believe the US is in bed with Islamic State and you can bet that Russia and Iran will be keen on advising Baghdad to be exceptionally assertive when it comes to expelling a highly suspicious Turkish presence near Najma.
You’re
reminded that Iran wields considerable influence both politically and
militarily in Iraq. The Iraqi military has proven largely ineffective
at defending the country against the ISIS advance and so, the
Quds-backed Shiite militias including the Badr Organisation, Asaib
Ahl al-Haq and Kataib Hezbollah have stepped in to fill the void (see
our full account here).
Of
course that means that the Ayatollah looms large in Iraq and when it
comes to loyalty, both the militias and a number of Iraqi lawmakers
pledge allegiance to Tehran and more specifically to Qassem
Soleimani. The
point is this: Iran is not going to stand idly by and let America and
Turkey put more boots on the ground in Iraq which
is why just hours after Ash Carter announced that The Pentagon is set
to send in more US SpecOps, Kataib Hezbollah threatened to
hunt them down and kill them. Not coincidentally, PM Haider al-Abadi
rejected a larger US troop presence just moments later.
Now, Abadi
has given Turkey 48 hours to get its troops out of Iraq or else.
Or
else what?, you might ask. Well, or else Baghdad will
appeal to
the UN Security Council where Russia and China would likely support
the Iraqi cause.
But
that’s a little too meek of a solution for some Iraqi politicians
including Hakim al-Zamili, the head of Iraq's parliamentary committee
on security and defense who said
on Sunday that Iraq
“may soon ask Russia for direct military intervention in response
to the Turkish invasion and the violation of Iraqi sovereignty.”
"Iraq
has the ability to repel these forces and drive them out of Iraqi
territory. We
could also request Russia to intervene militarily in Iraq in response
to Turkish violation of Iraqi sovereignty," he told Al-Araby
al-Jadeed.
Well
guess what? Hakim al-Zamili is a somebody.
He
was arrested in 2007 by Iraqi and American troops while holding a
high ranking office in the Health Ministry. Zamili was charged with
sending millions of dollars to Shiite militants who subsequently
kidnapped and killed Iraqi civilians. Sunni civilians. More
specifically, the
US suspected Zamili “of using his position to run a rogue unit of
the Mahdi Army, the Shiite militia that claims loyalty to the cleric
Moktada al-Sadr,” The
New York Times reported
at the time,
adding that he was accused of “flooding the Health Ministry's
payroll with militants, embezzling American money meant to pay for
Iraq's overworked medical system and using Health Ministry
'facilities and services for sectarian kidnapping and murder.''
At Friday prayers yesterday in Baghdad's Sadr City slum, one man in a gray suit seemed to attract as much attention as the preachers speaking over the P.A.
After a sermon that praised both armed and political resistance to the occupation of Iraq, many from the crowd of thousands rushed up to the front to congratulate Hakim al-Zamili, who appears to have won a resounding mandate as a member of parliament from Baghdad.
Though a celebrity here in Sadr City, many Iraqis call him a war criminal. Zamili was the deputy health minister during the ramp-up to Iraq's civil war, and he's accused of turning the ministry's guards into a Shia death squad, kidnapping and killing hundreds of Sunnis. Another ministry official who denounced Zamili disappeared and is presumed dead.
After being arrested and held over a year by the Americans, an Iraqi court acquitted Zamili after a brief trial.
“If I were really involved in those crimes, the courts would have convicted me,” Zamili said.
Right.
Anyway,
the point is that as we’ve been saying for months, Shiite
politicians along with Iran-backed militias now control Iraq, which
has essentially been reduced to a colony of Tehran.
There
will be no unilateral decisions on the part of the US or Turkey to
place troops in the country without pushback from Baghdad andeveryone
involved knows that when Baghdad pushes back, it means Iran
disapproves.
As
Zamili’s warning makes clear, Iraq (and thereby Iran) won’t be
shy about calling in the big guns from Moscow when they feel the
situation demands it - and the militas won't be shy about targeting
the "invaders."
"Turkish
interests in Iraq will now be a legitimate target because of Turkey's
assault on Iraqi territories," Kata'ib
Sayyid al-Shuhada, one of the Shia militias of the Popular
Mobilisation said in a statement. Similarly, Harakat al-Nujaba called
Turkey "a terrorist state." You're reminded that these
groups have a reputation for fearing no one other that Khamenei
himself. Not the US, not Turkey, not ISIS, no one:
We
close with what Zamili
said after
the establishment of the Baghdad-based joint intelligence cell
comprising officials from Iran, Russia, Syria, and Iraq:
“The idea is to formalize the relationship with Iran, Russia and Syria. We wanted a full-blown military alliance.”
*
* *
Bonus
color from ISW:
The
recent deployment into northern Iraq differs from past deployments in
three ways. First, Turkey does not appear to have undertaken the
action in order to contain the PKK directly, as there is no
significant PKK activity in or around Bashiqa. The base is also
located too far from other priority territory for the PKK, including
Sinjar west of Mosul, to be used as an effective staging point for
future operations against the PKK. Second, the Turkish battalion,
deployed to an area within the Disputed Internal Boundaries (DIBs) –
areas that have substantial Kurdish populations but remain outside of
Iraqi Kurdistan. Turkey likely intends to support Barzani and the KDP
in securing control over the DIBs while also positioning its own
forces to better influence what forces participate in the future
operation to recapture Mosul, formerly an ethnically diverse city
including Arabs, Kurds, and Turkmen. Third, the Turkish deployment
came only four days after Defense Secretary Ashton Carter announced
that additional U.S. Special Operations Forces (SOF) would deploy to
Iraq to conduct raids and intelligence-gathering in Iraq and Syria,
an announcement that generated denunciations from the Shi’a
political parties and threats of no-confidence votes against the
Prime Minister, forcing PM Abadi to reject publicly the presence of
foreign ground troops in Iraq. The Turkish troops thus deployed at a
particularly sensitive time.
Turkey
also maintains close connections with key players in northern Iraq.
Turkey has cooperated with Kurdistan Regional President Masoud
Barzani since 2013, particularly over crude oil exports through the
Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline. Barzani and Turkey share a mutual distrust of
the PKK, and the KDP currently competes with the PKK for control over
Sinjar district. Turkey also possesses close relations with former
Ninewa Province governor Atheel al-Nujaifi, who maintains a camp of
former local police and Arab fighters in Bashiqa called the “National
Mobilization.” Turkish support was essential for Atheel
al-Nujaifi’s elevation to the Ninewa governorship in 2009. Finally,
Turkey has close relations Osama al-Nujaifi, Atheel’s brother and
the leader of the Sunni Etihad bloc in the Council of Representatives
(CoR). Turkey will likely leverage these connections in order to
secure greater control over what armed and political actors
participate in operations to recapture Mosul. In particular, Turkey
will likely support the Nujaifis over Sunni Arabs with whom Turkey
has not cultivated relations.
Turkey’s
deployment of troops sparked strong rejection from the full spectrum
of Iraqi political actors. Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi and
Iraqi President Fuad Masoum strongly condemned the deployment as a
violation of Iraqi sovereignty and demanded that Turkey conduct an
immediate withdrawal. All
major Shi’a parties denounced the deployment as a violation of
Iraqi sovereignty, with a leading Sadrist official calling for Iraqi
airstrikes on the Turkish force if it did not depart the country.
Another pro-Maliki CoR member suggesting that “a Russian force”
could intervene to expel the Turkish battalion.
The
U.S. will not likely press Turkey on the issue, as anonymous U.S.
defense sources merely indicated that the U.S. was "aware"
of Turkey’s intentions. Iranian
proxy militias, however, could challenge Turkey elsewhere in the
country. Iran
likely ordered Iranian proxy militias to kidnap 18 Turkish
construction workers on September 2 in order to pressure Turkey into
ordering Turkish-backed rebels to cooperate with a ceasefire around
the besieged Shi’a majority towns of Fu’ah and Kifriya in
northern Syria. The kidnappings provided sufficient leverage against
Turkey and the kidnapped workers were released after Syrian rebels
enacted a local ceasefire. Iran could pursue similar actions against
Turkish assets in Baghdad or in southern Iraq.
This
situation may escalate further if Iran views the deployment as
threatening its vital strategic objectives in Iraq or Syria. Iran
rejects any foreign forces other than their own on Iraqi soil and
backs the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), Barzani’s rival in
Iraqi Kurdish politics trying to contest his control over the
Kurdistan regional presidency. Iranian proxies also recently sparred
violently with the Peshmerga in Tuz Khurmato in eastern Salah al-Din
proxies on November 12.
Shi’a
parties will use the episode to pressure PM Abadi to strongly reject
foreign intervention, particularly if reports that Turkey and Barzani
signed an agreement to establish a permanent Turkish base in Bashiqa
are correct. These
calls could complicate U.S. plans to additional Special Operations
Forces (SOF) to Iraq to as a “specialized expeditionary targeting
force” that will conduct raids and intelligence-gathering in Iraq
and Syria.
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