Kataib Hezbollah Is Part of Iraq’s PMF
The U.S.-designated terrorist group is the most significant player in the Popular Mobilization Forces, which is supposed to be under the command of Prime Minister Sudani—a fact that U.S. officials sometimes forget.
When American forces killed Kataib Hezbollah (KH) members in Iraq on February 3 and 7, the Pentagon was at pains to claim, incorrectly, that the United States was not targeting members of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), an institution that is legally under the prime minister's command and funded through the PMF Commission, also under the premier's authority. U.S. officials should be careful not to obfuscate these facts, particularly amid Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani's first White House visit and other significant bilateral discussions.
On February 5, Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Patrick Ryder stated, “The folks that we're striking are not part of the PMF." Yet Sudani visited wounded PMF troops after the February 3 strike. Similarly, on February 8, Ryder noted that the KH commander killed by the previous day's U.S. airstrike was “not a member of the PMF, he's a Kataib Hezbollah commander.” Again, the facts showed otherwise: the slain official in question, Abu Baqr al-Saeedi, was an advisor to the commander’s office at the PMF Central Security Directorate, which is led by the U.S.-sanctioned KH terrorist and human rights abuser Abu Zainab al-Lami (real name Hussein Falah Aziz al-Lami). Indeed, Abu Baqr’s PMF identification card was shown after his death.
Both during and after Sudani's landmark Washington visit, it is important to restate the facts regarding the direct relationship between KH, the Prime Minister's Office, and the broader Iraqi government:
- The PMF's chief of staff, senior operational commander, and day-to-day leader is the senior KH figure and U.S.-designated terrorist and human rights abuser Abdul-Aziz al-Mohammadawi (aka Abu Fadak). This means that KH is the first and primary recipient of more than $2.6 billion in annual Iraqi government funding to the PMF. Put another way, the parliament, cabinet, and Prime Minister’s Office have each authorized state payments to KH officials. Notably, Abu Fadak identified Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei as his commander during public remarks in Tehran on April 5.
- As noted above, the PMF's head of security is U.S.-sanctioned KH member Abu Zainab al-Lami.
- KH operates the state-funded 45th, 46th, and 47th Brigades of the PMF. Chain of command nominally runs through the Popular Mobilization Commission in the Prime Minister's Office, then up to the prime minister himself.
- KH also runs the PMF intelligence, missile, and anti-armor departments, plus Unit 313 (special forces) and Unit 101 (intelligence), both under Abu Fadak.
KH is directly responsible for numerous crimes and attacks against American targets, most recently:
- Killing three Americans in Jordan on January 28.
- Kidnapping Princeton scholar Elizabeth Tsurkov in Baghdad last year.
- Leading scores of drone. missile, and rocket attacks on U.S. bases at al-Asad, al-Tanf, and Tower 22 under the "Islamic Resistance in Iraq" umbrella brand.
- Threatening to arm and train insurgents in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Jordan.
Again, it is crucial that U.S. officials, congressional representatives, and media organs ask Sudani to clarify his relationship with the designated terrorist group KH. As commander-in-chief of the PMF, he could expel KH members from the force and cease paying them with a mere pen stroke, but he has not done so. Nor has he pursued human rights abusers, killers, and kidnappers within the KH contingent of Iraq’s security forces, or secured Elizabeth Tsurkov's release one year after she was seized by a group supposedly under his authority.