Project

The Iraqi State, Geopolitics, and the Popular Mobilization Forces

Policies that could potentially to chip away at paramilitary groups' power, mitigate their abuses, and enforce their accountability.

Date Published
1 Jun 2019
Project Status
Completed

Dr Vanda Felbab-Brown is a senior fellow in the Foreign Policy program at Brookings. Dr Felbab-Brown undertook fieldwork in Baghdad as part of UNU-CPR's research project, The Limits of Punishment, which was supported by UK aid from the UK government. The views expressed in this report, Pitfalls of the Paramilitary Paradigm: The Iraqi State, Geopolitics, and Al-Hashd al-Shaabi, are those of the author.

Iraq has a decades-long tradition of extensive paramilitary forces. They are highly varied in their political affiliations, ideologies, and objectives, and some have historically been part of the state while others have battled against it. Although formed mostly along sectarian lines and around particular political and tribal leaders, today some 60 paramilitary groups have coalesced under an umbrella organization known as the Popular Mobilization Forces (or Al-Hashd al-Shaabi).

These groups—which played a key role in defeating the Islamic State (ISIS) in Iraq, now pose their own challenges to the Iraqi state and society. They have deeply permeated the state and its still-developing political institutions. There is a substantial risk that they will exploit their power, undermining progress of the Iraqi state toward being a more inclusive, equitable, and capacious provider of public goods and security.

The paramilitary groups are also enmeshed in the region’s geopolitical rivalries, and in any regional conflict, they could act as key proxies of local powers, particularly Iran—outcomes severely detrimental to the stability of Iraq and adverse to US interests in the Middle East. Devising an effective policy for dealing with the paramilitary groups is thus fundamental to Iraq’s stability.

Various policies can be explored to chip away at their power, mitigate their abuses, and enforce their accountability. Over time, such policies can reduce their power relative to Iraqi citizens and the Iraqi state. Strengthening and depoliticizing Iraqi institutions—such as the army, police, judiciary, and local administrations—will be vital, but that is an unlikely near-term prospect. And the current geopolitical environment in the Middle East, with tensions running high between US and Iran on one hand and Iran and Saudi Arabia on the other, further severely complicate efforts to curtail the influence of the Hashd.

The implementation of any particular policy measure may be contingent on the emergence of more permissive conditions, but close consideration should be given to several policy avenues:

  • Creating economic alternatives for individual Hashd fighters interested in leaving the security sector;

  • Absorbing individual Hashd members into other state security institutions;

  • Rechanneling payment flows and establishing uniform promotion criteria for all Iraqi security actors;

  • Limiting the economic power and political capital of the Hashd;

  • Improving service delivery and strengthening the state at the local level;

  • Widening the separation of the Hashd from politics; and

  • Reinforcing accountability through a sequential peel-off approach.

Access Pitfalls of the paramilitary paradigm: The Iraqi state, geopolitics, and Al-Hashd al-Shaabi here.

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