By Rafid Fadhil Ali
Last
April the Kuwaiti government started building a new port on Boubyan Island near
the marine border with Iraq. The port, named Mubarak al-Kabir (Grand Mubarak)
after the founder of the Kuwaiti al-Sabah ruling dynasty, triggered the latest
crisis between Baghdad and Kuwait, with the port development causing both
official and public anger in Iraq. The Iraqi argument states that port activity
in the Khor Abdullah channel shared with Iraq will block the channel’s shipping
lanes leading to a nearby Iraqi port (The National [Abu Dhabi], July 18).
Kuwait rejects the Iraqi argument, claiming that the establishment of the new
port is a matter of national sovereignty as it is being built solely on Kuwaiti
territory.
One
of the angriest Iraqi reactions to the planned port development came from the
Shi’a insurgent group Kata’ib Hezbollah fi al-Iraq (Hezbollah Brigades in Iraq
- KH). The group issued a statement on its website calling on Kuwait to stop
building the port and threatened to target the workers in the project
(Kataibhizbollah.org, July 16).
There
has been a noticeable surge in the activities of KH recently. The group has
claimed responsibility for many of the recent attacks against U.S. forces.
Statements from the movement indicate that most of their attacks are launched
with rockets targeting U.S. bases in central and southern Iraq (al-Joumhouria
[Beirut], June 10; al-Alam TV [Tehran], July 26).
KH
is also remembered for its success in hacking the communications systems of
U.S. drones. KH had used low-cost Russian-made software called SkyGrabber to
intercept video from U.S. Predator drones. KH claimed that it had been hacking
the system since mid-2008, however, U.S. officials only admitted the
penetration in late 2009 (al-Akhbar, January 2, 2010; Wall Street Journal,
December 17, 2009; see also Terrorism Monitor, April 12).
While
the public and political debate is escalating in Iraq over the issue of whether
to agree to an extension of the U.S. military presence in Iraq, the KH has
taken a strong stance against the extension. Months before the other Iraqi
parties started debating the issue, KH had already threatened to intensify its
attacks on U.S. forces if the complete withdrawal scheduled for the end of 2011
was delayed (kataibhizbollah.org, December 27, 2010).
Along
with Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq (The Groups of the Righteous- AAH), KH is one of several
splinter groups of Muqtada al-Sadr’s Jaysh al-Mahdi (Mahdi Army - JAM). The
group is widely believed to have strong and direct links with the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard’s elite al-Quds Force. Although KH has created its own
website where it publishes its statements, videos and propaganda, not much is
known about its leadership. KH has, however, long been linked with the
controversial Iraqi former militia leader and MP Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis (a.k.a.
Jamal Ja’far al-Ibrahim), though the MP denies any link to this group or any
other insurgent party. Al-Muhandis was designated as a threat to peace and
stability in Iraq by the U.S. Treasury Department in 2009 (in part due to his
alleged close ties to Iran’s Quds Force), but his seat in parliament provides
him with complete immunity under the Iraqi constitution. [1] Al-Muhandis was
accused of involvement in the 1983 bombings of the French and American
embassies in Kuwait City, as well as having a role in an assassination attempt
on the Kuwaiti Amir in 1985. Al-Muhandis denies the accusations but typically
talks about Kuwait with contempt. In an interview last year, al-Muhandis
claimed that the Kuwaiti government had handed a number of his close relatives
over to Saddam Hussein’s government and that these individuals were later
executed (al-Akhbar, April 12, 2010; for al-Muhandis, see also Terrorism
Monitor, March 4, 2010).
The
KH has also been tied to Ahmad al-Shaibani, the former spokesman of Muqtada
al-Sadr, but al-Shaibani denied such involvement in an interview from the
Iranian holy city of Qom, where he stayed with al-Sadr (Almowallem.net,
November 29, 2009).
Unlike
the AAH, which had been subject to severe criticism and condemnation by
al-Sadr, KH and the Sadr movement are on good terms. In spite of the fact that
the KH was established by elements that abandoned al-Sadr’s leadership and
formed their own organization, the anti-American Shi’a cleric has always had a
friendly approach when dealing with and talking about the KH.
The
group is one of the few Iraqi Shi’a factions to clearly declare its allegiance
to Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. This allegiance puts the
group closer to the ideological line followed by the Lebanese Hezbollah. KH’s
logo is almost a replica of the Lebanese party’s emblem.
Like
most other Iraqi insurgent groups, Shi’a and Sunni alike, KH is rarely involved
in regional disputes between the Iraqi government and the neighbouring
countries, but the Mubarak port issue presents an ideal opportunity for the KH,
a small but effective Shi’a group, to appeal to wider Iraqi constituencies. The
dispute stirs a national resentment against Kuwait based on a lingering Iraqi
belief that Boubyan Island is properly part of Iraq. The new direction in KH’s
policy might bring it a wave of popularity and help it to build credibility
around its claim that it is a national movement with no sectarian agenda.
Iraq’s
Hezbollah Brigades claim to have obtained three surface-to-surface missiles
from an Iraqi weapons depot after the fall of Saddam Hussein which it intends
to use against South Korean construction workers in Boubyan and government
facilities in Kuwait City if the port project goes ahead (Arab Times, August
15). An advisor to the Iraqi minister of defence revealed that the local
government in the southern province of Basrah asked for Baghdad’s aerial
support to locate rockets deployed by KH in the area (Alazma.com, July 20).
Iraqi
MP Kazim al-Shemmari, a member of the Iraqiya White Party (formed last August
by a group of MPs defecting from the Iraqiya List – see al-Sumaria, March 8),
warned Kuwait on August 12 that “there are armed brigades in Iraq which can
invade Kuwait entirely without permission from the government, which in such
incidents would not bear responsibility for the Brigades' actions since they
are militant groups.” The MP went on to suggest that tensions between the two
countries could be eased if Kuwait dropped its compensation claims for damage
done in the 1990-1991 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and began to allow Kuwaiti
investment in Iraq (Kuwait Times, August 14).
Whether
Baghdad and Washington agree to update the terms of the Status of Forces
Agreement (SOFA) to extend the U.S. military presence beyond the end of this
year, Iraq’s Hezbollah has already entered a new phase in its operational
history. Characteristic of this phase is a larger role in anti-American attacks
in Iraq combined with greater involvement in regional issues designed to boost
its influence in Iraqi domestic politics.
Note:
-This article was published in the Terrorism Monitor, Volume: 9,
Issue: 33, on 19/08/2011
-1. U.S. Treasury Department, Press Release TG-195, July 2, 2009. For a profile of al-Muhandis see the author’s article in Militant Leadership Monitor, March 2011
-1. U.S. Treasury Department, Press Release TG-195, July 2, 2009. For a profile of al-Muhandis see the author’s article in Militant Leadership Monitor, March 2011
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