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Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq

Key statistics

2006
First Recorded Activity
2009
First Attack
2025
Profile Last Updated

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How to Cite

Crenshaw, M., & Robinson, K. (2025). Mapping Militants Project. Rice University. https://doi.org/10.25613/G0K4-WF70

Mapping Militants Project. “Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq.” Last modified June 1, 2025. https://mappingmilitants.org/node/336/

Profile Contents

Narrative

Narrative of the Organization's History

Organization

Leadership, Name Changes, Size Estimates, Resources, Geographic Locations

Strategy

Ideology, Aims, Political Activities, Targets, and Tactics

Major Attacks

First Attacks, Largest Attacks, Notable Attacks

Interactions

Foreign Designations and Listings, Community Relations, Relations with Other Groups, State Sponsors and External Influences

Maps

Mapping relationships with other militant groups over time in regional maps

Iraq
Syria

Main Tabs Group

Overview
Formed: 
January 1, 2006

Disbanded: Group is active

First Attack: July-August 2006: Elements of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq fought alongside Hezbollah in the 2006 Lebanon-Israeli War (casualties unknown).[1]

Last Attack: March 31, 2024: AAH fighters clashed with the Iraqi Federal Police in eastern Baghdad. One police officer was killed in the fighting. (1 killed, 2 wounded).[2]

Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq (AAH) is a Shiite militant and political organization operating primarily in Iraq. AAH was founded as a splinter group from the Mahdi Army in 2006 under the leadership of Qais al-Khazali. The group is backed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corp (IRGC) and promotes Iran’s interests in Iraq. The group primarily targeted U.S. forces between 2006 and 2011 – rebranding itself as a political organization, while covertly continuing its militant campaign and often serving as an enforcer of specific Iraqi politicians’ interests, following the withdrawal of U.S. forces. In response to the rise of the Islamic State (IS) in late 2013, AAH joined the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), a umbrella of Iraqi militias, to fight against IS alongside Iraqi and coalition forces in Iraq and Syria. Since 2017, AHH has focused more on its political activities than kinetic action. In 2018, its political wing became a member of the Fatah coalition in the Iraqi parliament, winning 15 seats in the following year’s parliamentary elections. Despite Fatah’s defeat in the 2021 elections, AAH extended its power in Iran, through violence, including mass protests and the attempted assassination of Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, and political moves made in partnership with the IRGC and other Iran backed politicians. Since 2022, AAH has had significant control over the Iraqi security sector, oil industry and Prime Minister’s office. AAH is a member of the Islamic Resistance in Iran, a coalition of militia groups formed to fight Israel and the United States amidst the war in Gaza. However, AAH has taken a step back within the group and has not publicly participated in most operations. Instead, AAH currently focuses on its political control of Iraq and has become a trusted tool for the IRGC Quds Force (IRGC QF) and its commander Esmail Ghaani.

Narrative

Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq (AAH, “League of the Righteous” in Arabic) is an Iran-backed Shiite militant organization. It is also sometimes called the Khazali Network. AAH was formed in January 2006 by Qais al-Khazali as a splinter group from a Shiite militia operating in Iraq known as the Mahdi Army. AAH is often referred to as one of the “Special Groups,” a term used by the U.S. military to denote the Iranian-controlled Shiite militias operating in Iraq.[3]

Before founding AAH, Khazali commanded a brigade within nationalist Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army (Jaysh al-Mahdi or JAM). The Mahdi Army was a Shiite militia established in 2003 in response to the U.S. invasion of Iraq. By 2004, Khazali and his followers within the Mahdi Army began to act independently of the group’s leadership. Most notably, Khazali and his faction continued to fight U.S. troops in the summer of 2004 despite Sadr’s order to the Mahdi Army to lay down its arms.[4] While Khazali ultimately reconciled with Sadr, he split from the Mahdi Army with most of his brigade in early 2006. In establishing a new splinter group, Khazali sought greater autonomy and an opportunity to challenge Muqtada al-Sadr for authority among the Shiite armed groups.[5]

Coinciding with his split from Muqtada al-Sadr and the Mahdi Army, Khazali and his armed group were recruited by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). The IRGC began training a new coalition of militias in Iraq, and it invited Khazali to serve as the head of this “Special Groups Network,” which became known as the Khazali Network.[6] The militant group operating under the Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq (AAH) name and with Khazali as its leader was first active in Iraq as early as July 2006, immediately after Khazali took over as head of the Iranian Special Groups Network. There is some uncertainty regarding the relationship between AAH and Khazali’s Special Groups Network. Evidence suggests that AAH and the Khazali Network are two names for the same militant organization. However, it is possible that AAH was one of multiple affiliates comprising the Khazali Network. [7] Given the overlapping leadership of AAH and the Khazali Network, this profile treats these two entities as different names for the same militant group.

Since its inception, AAH has relied heavily on Iranian funding, training, and logistical support. The group is one of Iran’s most influential and capable proxies in Iraq, carrying out Tehran’s agenda and promoting its interests.[8] Shortly after the group’s creation, AAH elements fought alongside Hezbollah, another Iranian proxy militant organization, in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon War.[9] AAH’s fighters in Lebanon were extensively trained and funded by the IRGC.[10]

At its inception in 2006, AAH’s main targets were U.S. coalition troops in Iraq.  Between 2006 and 2011, the group claimed responsibility for over 6,000 attacks on U.S. forces.[11] Following an attack in March 2007 in which five Americans were killed in Karbala, Iraq, U.S. forces captured Khazali and Hezbollah commander Ali Musa Daqduq. Akram al-Kabi, a close confidante of Khazali’s and one of the AAH’s top military commanders, temporarily assumed command of the organization until Khazali’s release in early 2010.[12]

In 2008, Muqtada al-Sadr demanded that Kabi re-unite AAH with the Mahdi Army, but Kabi refused.[13]  After the Iraqi Army seized Basra from the Mahdi Army and other Shiite militia groups in 2008, the Mahdi Army negotiated peace with the government, while many of AAH’s leaders fled to Iran. While in Iran, exiled AAH members received additional training and logistical support from the Iranian government and IRGC.[14] AAH members who remained in Iraq continued to target coalition forces and the former Mahdi Army members.[15]

In December 2009, AAH orchestrated Khazali’s release in exchange for the remains of one accomplice of Peter Moore, a British computer consultant whom AAH kidnapped along with his four bodyguards in May 2007.[16] Moore’s four bodyguards were killed by AAH while in captivity.[17] In February 2010, the group took another Western hostage, U.S. Department of Defense contractor Issa T. Salomi. Salomi was released in March 2010 in exchange for the release of four AAH fighters whom the Iraqi government had imprisoned.[18]

Shortly after the U.S. withdrawal in 2011, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki invited the group to enter the political process. AAH began to reorient itself toward formal politics and away from militancy in this new context.[19] The group sought to rebrand itself as an Iraqi nationalist political party. AAH shifted its goals from solely removing the U.S. military presence in Iraq to maintaining a Shiite-controlled Iraqi state, expanding Iranian influence in Iraq, eclipsing the Sadrists as the most influential Shiite group in Iraq, and providing social services to Iraq’s Shiite population. AAH also expanded its operations and established a political office in Beirut, Lebanon, cementing its close ties to Hezbollah. Despite its new focus, the group did not renounce its former militancy and refused to surrender its weapon caches to the Iraqi government.[20]

In 2012, AAH attempted to garner support for its pro-Iranian political agenda by launching a campaign in which it distributed over 20,000 posters of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, throughout Iraq.[21] The group also conducted a series of assassinations of Sadrist leaders, hoping to weaken the group and take its place as the preeminent Shiite political faction in the country.[22] At Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s request, AAH formed a political wing, al-Sadiqoon (“the sincere ones” in English), ahead of the 2014 Iraqi parliamentary elections.[23] Al-Sadiqoon’s leader, Adnan Fihan al-Dulaimi, who is not known to be a member of AAH, appeared in military fatigues in videos published through AAH-affiliated Al-Ahed TV and carries the title “sheikh,” indicating a background in religious studies.[24]

Al-Sadiqoon won a single seat in Iraq’s 2014 parliamentary elections and allied itself with Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon (“State of Law” in English) coalition.[25] Hassan Salem Abbas Jabr held Sadiqoon’s first and only parliamentary seat from 2014 to 2018, representing Baghdad province. The extent of Hassan Salem’s connection to AAH proper is unclear. However, he notably appeared alongside several AAH leaders at a memorial service in 2019.[26] After AAH’s entrance into politics, the group remained partnered with Maliki and his political coalition. AAH quickly earned itself a reputation for being the military muscle behind Maliki’s Shiite political bloc.[27]  For instance, in 2013, the Maliki government allegedly used AAH fighters to police Anbar province instead of the formal Iraqi police.[28]

Beginning in 2013, AAH focused on countering the rise of the Islamic State (IS) in Iraq and Syria, participating in battles in the Salah al-Din, Ninewa, Anbar, Najaf, Diyala provinces and Baghdad in Iraq,[29] and along the Syria-Iraqi border and Aleppo in Syria.[30]

AAH fought alongside other militia groups, Iraqi security forces, and U.S. troops as a member of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF, Hashd as-Shaabi in Arabic). Founded in 2014, the PMF is a state-sponsored umbrella group composed of approximately forty Iraqi militias, the largest number and most powerful of which are Shia.[31] Lacking a strong regular security force, the Iraqi government partnered with sectarian militias, some of which had existed for decades, to assist in liberating IS-held areas.[32] For AAH, the PMF apparatus was an important source of influence and recruitment. As a constituent group within the PMF, AAH gained many recruits amongst the Shia tribes of southern and central Iraq.[33]

AAH was deployed to some of the most highly-contested areas in Iraq in the battle against IS. For instance, the group led the Shiite militias in the battle for Amerli in 2013-2014 and Samarra in 2015-2016.[34] In retaliation, IS carried out a suicide attack at a soccer match sponsored by AAH in a town south of Baghdad in March 2016.[35]

Along with AAH operations against the Islamic State, the group was accused of human rights violations in Iraq. In late 2013 and early 2014, reports surfaced of AAH fighters jailing or executing anti-Maliki Sunni Arab tribesmen in southern and central Iraq. Human Rights Watch reported that AAH fighters killed 109 Sunni men in the outskirts of Baghdad between March 2014 and July 2014.[36]

In Syria, AAH had three goals: to defend the Assad regime, weaken and turn back the advance of the Islamic State (IS), and secure Iranian strategic interests. In 2013, AAH worked in conjunction with Kata’ib Hezbollah (KH), another Iranian-backed Shiite militia group, to establish Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba (Nujaba), which served as a front organization to channel AAH and KH fighters into Syria.[37] Run by Akram Kabi, Nujaba operates as its own Iran proxy group as of 2025.[38] Iran continued to provide logistical and financial aid in support of AAH’s operations during this time, sharing an estimated 1.5-2 million USD with the group each month.[39]

As a member of the PMF, AAH cooperated with U.S. forces to target IS. Despite the group’s opposition to the United States during its occupation of Iraq, AAH shifted its anti-U.S. position. In 2015, an AAH spokesman released a statement that communicated the group’s willingness to accept a U.S. military presence in Iraq to combat IS insofar as the U.S. presence operated under the supervision of the Iraqi government.[40] In March 2016, reports surfaced that AAH was in possession of several U.S. vehicles and military equipment, including at least two M113 armored personnel carriers.[41] However, on March 21, 2016, AAH released an anti-U.S. statement via its television channel, al-Ahad: “if the U.S. administration doesn’t withdraw its forces immediately, we will deal with them as forces of occupation.” The statement was likely released in response to an announcement made by the United States that it sent additional troops to Iraq to bolster coalition efforts against IS.[42]

In 2017, AAH played integral roles in multiple PMF-led offensives against IS. AAH’s most notable efforts were in offensives against the Islamic State near al-Qa’im and Kirkuk.[43] Photos of the al-Qa’im offensive show the AAH using expensive military equipment, including what appeared to be an Iranian T-72 tank.[44] During the offensives, AAH also continued to engage in sectarian targeting and violence, reportedly raiding Sunni homes in Kirkuk.[45]

AAH also participated in recapturing the town of Abu Kamal on the eastern border of Syria in November of 2017.[46] While this episode occurred as part of the counter-IS campaign in Syria, it illustrates how Iran has used its proxy forces to pursue strategic depth in the Middle East. Abu had great strategic value: its seizure created a land route from Iran to Lebanon, allowing Iran to directly supply ordnance to Hezbollah.[47] After the operation, Khazali traveled to the Israel-Lebanon border with a Hezbollah escort and emphasized his group's willingness “to stand united with the Lebanese people and the Palestinian cause in the face of the Israeli occupation.”[48] This appearance demonstrated the extensive links between the various Iran-backed militant groups, such as AAH and Hezbollah, allowing the movement of ordnance and troops between Iraq and Lebanon through an Iranian-supported network.

While AAH’s everyday combat activities against IS in Iraq decreased in frequency and scope after 2017, the group continued to conduct military operations in Iraq. Since 2017, the group has operated primarily in Salah ad-Din, Kirkuk, Diyala, and Ninewa provinces and in Baghdad.[49] PMF brigades known to be under AAH and its affiliates control the 41st, 42nd, and 43rd PMF brigades.[50] In addition to controlling individual groups, AAH and its associated militia groups control PMF regional commands. The PMF has 12 regional commands, each of which controls PMF operations within an area of Iraq. As of March 2024, the Baghdad operations commander is Hussein al-Samahi, an AAH affiliate, and the Salah ad Din operations commander is Safaa al Saadi, an AAH affiliate.[51] 

As the fight against IS in Iraq progressed, AAH also invested further in parliamentary politics.[52] In January 2018, AAH’s political affiliate al-Sadiqoon joined the Fatah al-Mubin coalition (“Manifest Victory” in Arabic). The Fatah coalition consisted primarily of the political wings of PMF units supported by Iran.[53] In the 2018 elections, the Fatah coalition won 47 out of 329 seats, the second most behind Muqtada al-Sadr’s Sairoon alliance (which won 54 seats). Of Fatah’s 47 total seats, AAH’s political wing al-Sadiqoon won 14.[54] Spokesmen for AAH indicated a clear desire to expel U.S. forces during the run-up to the election. This rhetorical campaign culminated in Fatah’s instrumental role in orchestrating the passage of a January 2020 parliamentary resolution calling on the government to expel U.S. troops from Iraq.[55] This turn to politics did not preclude militia retribution and action against Iraqi ethnic minorities. Despite the IS loss of territory, the 42nd PMF was accused of killing eight Sunni civilians in al-Farhatiyah in October 2020 while also forcing Christian civilians to leave their home in Ninewa province. [56]

In response to growing internal discontent in Iraq, AAH sought to suppress demonstrations and intimidate protesters. Beginning in October 2019, anti-government protestors demonstrated in Baghdad and across Iraq’s southern provinces. Their grievances centered on government corruption and failure to foster economic opportunity and provide public services.[57]As the movement progressed, protestors condemned Iran for enabling government corruption and interfering in Iraqi affairs through the PMF.[58] Iraqi security forces forcefully cracked down on protests with tear gas and live ammunition, and over 100 people died as a result of the violence in the first six days of demonstrations.[59]

By January 2020, the death toll from the protests was over 600, with thousands of injuries and an unknown number of arrests and torture cases.[60] Iraqi Interior Ministry spokesman Saad Maan released a statement that Iraqi security forces did not fire on protestors and that all mass shooting deaths were the responsibility of militant groups.[61] PMF spokesman Ahmed Jassim al-Asadi denied any PMF presence.[62] However, experts assess that AAH sought to suppress demonstrations and intimidate protesters as they believed the systemic change to Iraq’s political system the protesters demand would diminish AAH influence within the country. Activists and observers, including the U.S. government, accused AAH of using violent tactics to disperse and intimidate protesters in Baghdad, Nasiriyah, and other major cities. Observers accused AAH of deploying snipers on top of roofs overlooking major protest sites.[63] AAH and other major militias were also blamed for the disappearances and killings of prominent protest movement leaders and civil activists in Iraq.[64] AAH spokespeople and Khazali denied all accusations levied against the group.[65]

On January 3, 2020, the United States conducted a drone strike killing IRGC QF Commander Brigadier General Qasem Soleimani and KH leader and Deputy PMF Chairman Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.[66] In response to the strike, Khazali released several statements across social media supporting Iran’s response on January 8 and vowed an “earthshattering” response by the Iraqi groups.[67] AAH also partnered with militias to form the Usbat al-Thaereen (English: League of the Revolutionaries).[68] Experts also observed a spike in attacks against U.S. bases following the drone strike.[69] As part of the wave of attacks, AAH rockets struck the U.S. Embassy in November and December 2020 and several sites in Erbil in February 2021 (see the major attacks section for more details on AAH affiliated strikes).[70] AAH and other militias also began using front organizations for their operations. AAH utilized the Ashab al-Kahf (though Ashab al-Kahf now appears to be a front group that shares ties with both AAH and Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba[71]), Liwa Khaibar and Quwwat Dhu Faqar brands in its attacks. [72] AAH and its allies also utilized different social media channels, most often on Telegram, to take credit for attacks and give themselves plausible deniability.[73]

In May 2020, Mustafa al-Kadhimi was appointed Prime Minister of Iraq with the support of Muqtada al-Sadr over the objection of the Iran backed militias. The appointment was especially insulting to the Iran backed groups given Kadhimi’s past roles with the Iraqi National Intelligence Service, which the PMF saw as partially responsible for the Soleimani drone strike.[74] Once in office, Kadhimi cracked down on the Iran backed militias amid their escalation in force against the United States following the Soleimani drone strike. His office attempted to control PMF groups, remove corrupt and militia backed officials from the government and security services, and cut off militia illicit funding streams.[75] Khazali criticized Kadhimi’s efforts, calling his actions illegal.[76]

This period was also marked by internal divides between AAH and KH. Between October 2020 and February 2021, KH agreed to a partial ceasefire, limiting its kinetic activity against the United States. However, AAH ignored the ceasefire and continued to attack U.S. bases to force the United States out of the country. KH attacked AAH illicit business interests to coerce AAH into following its guidance and adhering to the ceasefire.[77] The KH-AAH confrontation also played out in public, with KH criticizing AAH’s continued use of force against the United States, and also claiming that AAH attacks did no damage, while AAH argued that KH was ineffective at pressuring the United States to leave Iraq.[78]

During this period, IRGC-QF control over the militias appeared to decrease and relations with AAH fractured. Observers argued that Esmail Ghaani, Soleimani’s successor as head of the IRGC-QF, was unable to exert the same degree of authority over the IRGC’s Iraqi proxies, leading to observed disagreements in strategy between the two throughout 2020.[79] In November 2021, Khazali made statements critical of Iran’s support for the proxy groups in Iraq. However, experts assess that by December 2021 Brigadier General Esmail Ghaani, with the support of Ayatollah Khamanei and a shifting strategy that prioritized influencing Iraqi politics instead of kinetic action, attained full control of the PMF activities – and in 2022, Khazali made statements praising his leadership.[80] As of 2025, Khazali regularly travels to Tehran to meet with Khamenei and has been seen publicly and prominently with Iranian leadership.[81]

Prior to the October 2021 elections AAH, Badr, and KH, among others again formed the Fatah alliance. Sadr dominated the election, winning 73 seats to Nouri al-Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon coalition 33 and the Fatah Alliance’s 17. The result was a disaster for AAH and the Iran backed groups, as it significantly diminished their power in the parliament and represented a rejection of their message and ties to Iran. The Fatah coalition called the elections fraudulent.[82]

In response to the electoral failure, AAH and its associated militias ramped up efforts to disrupt Iraq. AAH and Badr organized protests beginning October 19, 2021 demanding a recount of the ballots. On October 31 (reports indicate either October 30 or 31), an unidentified militia launched four Katyusha rockets at the Green Zone in Baghdad. Experts believe that AAH was likely responsible for the attacks based on the launch location and that they were aimed at the Iraqi National Intelligence Service (INIS). On November 5, AAH supporters and protestors clashed with Iraqi security forces. Between 1 and 3 were killed and over 100 were injured.[83] On November 6, Khazali gave a speech threatening Kadhimi, claiming he would pay for the deaths of the AAH supporters.[84]

On November 7, two to three quadcopter drones matching those used in previous Iran backed militia operations attacked the residence of Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi in the green zone in Baghdad in an apparent assassination attempt. While AAH and its counterpart militias denied involvement, experts assess that AAH was responsible and that the operation was carried out with support from KH and the knowledge of Qais al-Khazali and Laith al-Khazali (Qais’s brother and military leader within AAH – see leadership for more details on Laith al-Khazali). Kadhimi escaped the attack unharmed, while several members of his security team were injured.[85]

The 2019 protests, the strikes against Soleimani and Muhandis, and the 2021 election results put AAH and the other Iran backed groups in a difficult position and threatened their dominance over the Iraqi political space. However, with the support of the IRGC QF (and specifically IRGC QF Commander Esmail Ghaani), AAH, the PMF, and Iran utilized political maneuvers and targeted kinetic action to expand their influence over Iraq. The strategy began with Ghaani, in partnership with Nouri al-Maliki, meeting with Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Court’s head Judge Faiq Zaydan in January 2022. In February 2022, Zaydan and the court ruled that a simple majority in parliament was not sufficient to appoint the President, and instead, a two-thirds majority was required to form a government, effectively preventing Sadr from excluding the Iran backed political parties from his government.[86] The change prevented Sadr from forming a government, and in June 2022, Sadr instructed his 73 members of parliament to resign in June 2022.[87] In August, he announced he would be stepping back from politics, leading to mass protests in the green zone of Baghdad and clashes between the PMF and Sadr backed groups.[88] With Sadr out of the picture, AAH, the Fatah Alliance, and Maliki installed Mohammad Shia al-Sudani as Prime Minister.[89] Experts assess Khazali benefited more than any counterparts (with former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in a close second). The end result of Sudani in power gave Khazali and AAH extreme influence over the Prime Minister’s office and other areas within the government and demonstrated his use to Ghaani.[90]

In the period following Sudani’s appointment, AAH and the other militias purged the government, including the security forces of those loyal to Kadhimi. AAH took key positions within the government to maximize its influence including in Counter Terrorism Service, National Security Service (NSS), several border crossings and airports, the Communications and Media Commission, the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Oil, the Petroleum Contracting and Licensing Directorate, and in the Prime Minister’s office.[91] Some of the officials that took these roles were previously associated with AAH attacks. For example, Adnan Fayhan al-Dulaymi, the Governor of the Babil province, led a January 2007 attack on Karbala that killed five Americans (four were executed),[92] and the NSS Deputy Director, Ahmed al-Tayyar, was an AAH fighter. [93]

AAH’s political resurgence marked the beginning of a shift away from a public kinetic centric strategy, but did not necessarily immediately end all AAH militia activity. For example, on November 7, 2022, AAH members, in coordination with Nujaba, KH, and the IRGC QF killed an American aid worker, Stephen Troell in Baghdad.[94] AAH fighters also engaged in active combat against Muqtada al-Sadr supporters and Saraya al-Salam (Muqtada al-Sadr’s armed group and a follow on from the Mahdi Army) in 2022 and 2024. During the August 2022 protests, AAH soldiers clashed with Sadr supporters in Basra, while unidentified militias attacked the AAH headquarters in Kut, Babil, Maysan, and Basra.[95] In February 2024, experts concluded that the assassination of a senior AAH leader and commander of the 43rd PMF brigade in Maysan was organized and carried out by Sadr supporters.[96] The assassination coincided with the killing of a Sadr supporter and the shelling of the AAH headquarters in Hilla city.[97] Between December 2023 and February 2024, clashes between Saraya al-Salam and AAH killed approximately 200 people across Iraq and included the burning of AAH headquarters and gunfights in the streets.[98]

Besides the clashes with Sadr backed forces, the lack of kinetic action, especially against the United States, distinguished AAH from its counterparts, especially following Hamas’ terrorist attack against Israel on October 7, 2023, and the ensuing war in Gaza. In response to Israel’s war in Gaza, the IRGC QF partnered with the militia groups in Iraq to form the Islamic Resistance in Iraq (IRI). The IRI is effectively a collection of the major militia groups in Iraq, including AAH, KH, Nujaba, Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada (KSS), and others.[99] Experts agree that the IRGC QF is controlling these groups, ensuring that they coordinate and that all attacks are claimed under the IRI brand, making it difficult to assign responsibility to individual groups.[100] The group set up the al-Aqsa joint operations room in October 2023 to coordinate responses to Israel’s war.[101] IRI has carried out hundreds of attacks since then, targeting U.S. and Israeli forces, military installations, and diplomatic sites, using a mix of indirect fire rockets and UAVs.[102] According to experts, despite this drastic increase in Iran proxy activity, AAH is not responsible or directly involved in most attacks. Instead, AAH is likely focused on their political sway within Iraq and providing logistical support for Nujaba, KH, and KSS efforts.[103] Experts also believe that AAH could have been involved in strikes in October 2023 against the Baghdad airport and December 2023 against the U.S. embassy, considering the Baghdad location, the lack of claim by IRI, and the style of the attack (further details on these operations can be found in the major attacks section).[104]

On several occasions since the beginning of the war in Gaza, IRI members have criticized Khazali and AAH for not undertaking combat operations. In November 2023, KH Secretary General Abu Hussein praised the militias fighting against the United States and Israel, naming KH, Ansar Allah al-Awfiya, Nujaba, and KSS – leaving out AAH. Likewise, Akram Kabi of Nujaba said that the groups needed to be more aggressive. AAH responded by reminding KH that AAH plays a role within the resistance and that Nujaba’s attacks in Iraq had failed to kill any U.S. soldiers.[105] Khazali and AAH appear to want to appeal to both their hardline base, as well as more moderate Iraqis and the international community. Instead of directly calling for violence against Israel, Khazali often demands international action to end the violence in Gaza.[106]

While AAH and the Iran backed groups have long held ties to the Assad regime in Syria, the Iran backed militant groups were forced to flee the country in December 2024 when Assad fell to Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS).[107]AAH and partners were vocal opponents of leaving Syria to be taken by HTS, given the key role and effort they previously put in to stabilize the country.[108] In the months following the fall of Assad, the IRGC and Iran backed groups opposed the normalization of relationships between Iraq and the new Syrian government. Khazali and AAH were vocal opponents of normalizing relationships and Khazali pushed Prime Minister Sudani to not meet with Interim Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa in Spring 2025.[109] Despite this pressure, Sharaa met with Sudani in April 2025.[110] The meeting between Sudani and Sharaa demonstrated the limits of IRGC and Iranian backed militia influence over the Iraqi government, and the lack of militant activity could signal Iran backed PMF weakness.

In late 2024 and early 2025, the Iran backed government coalition began splitting into two parts. The first group includes Nouri al-Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon and Khazali’s Sadiqoun. The second group includes Hadi al-Ameri’s Badr, Prime Minister Sudani, and Faleh Fayyad (the chairman of the PMF).

A central reason for the split is a debate over two proposed laws that would govern the PMF. First, the PMF Authority Law, which is supported by Ameri, Sudani, and Fayyad, would give the Prime Minister (in effect Sudani) more power over the PMF and allow Fayyad to remain in his role. This law is opposed by Maliki and Khazali.[111] The second law, the PMF Service and Retirement Law, which is supported by Maliki, Khazali and KH, would force Fayyad out of his position and allow Iran backed militias to install a new leader. Experts assess that this could allow the PMF to further develop toward an Iraqi IRGC, which is a long-term goal of Khazali and other militias. The law also increases the PMF budget.[112] As part of the debate, AAH conducted a public campaign against Fayyad, including accusing him of ties to Turkey.[113]

Organization

Vertical Tabs

Leadership

Qais al-Khazali (2006-present): Khazali is the founder of AAH and its leader, as of June 2025. He was a pupil of the prominent Shiite cleric Mohammad Sadiq al-Sadr and served as a military commander in the Mahdi Army, a militant group led by Sadr’s son Muqtada al-Sadr. Khazali broke with the Mahdi Army in 2006 to establish AAH. British forces captured Qais al-Khazali, his brother Laith al-Khazali and, senior Hezbollah operative Ali Mussa Daqduq in Basra in March 2007.[114] He was held prisoner until January 2010, when he was released in exchange for the remains of one of contractor Peter Moore’s bodyguards, whom AAH took hostage in May 2007.[115] Akram al-Kabi, the current leader of Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba and former AAH member, led AAH during Khazali’s detention.[116] Khazali is AAH’s most visible figure, regularly delivering statements on its behalf. Khazali was designated by the U.S. Department of Treasury for human rights abuses in December 2019 and by the U.S. Department of State as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist in January 2020.[117] According to experts, Khazali’s worldview is likely shaped by Mohammad Sadiq al-Sadr, who pushed for global resistance of the downtrodden, as Khazali believes in a global Islamic resistance and a form of Wilayat al-Faqih.[118]

Laith al-Khazali (2006-present): Laith al-Khazali is Qais al-Khazali’s brother and the deputy leader of AAH.[119] He has been a member of AAH’s core leadership since its inception in 2006.[120] British forces in Basra captured Laith al-Khazali in March 2007 along with his brother Qais and senior Hezbollah operative Ali Mussa Daqduq.[121] He was released in June 2009 as part of a “reconciliation effort” between the Iraqi government and AAH.[122] Laith al-Khazali is considered AAH’s military commander and enforcer for political, business, and military operations – and often operates across boundaries and without publicly claiming his operations. Experts report that he controls several active militant cells operating under or within AAH.[123] He was designated by the U.S. Department of Treasury for human rights abuses in December 2019 and by the U.S. Department of State as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist in January 2020.[124] Despite Laith al-Khazali’s role as AAH’s military commander and his role leading militant cells, there is little public reporting on his activities.

Akram al-Kabi (2006 to 2013): Kabi was a key figure within AAH who joined the group at its inception in 2006. Prior to AAH’s creation, he was a military commander in the Mahdi Army. Kabi temporarily assumed leadership of AAH between March 2007 and January 2010 while Qais al-Khazali and Laith al-Khazali were imprisoned by coalition forces. Since 2013, he has served as the leader of Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, an organization established by AAH and Kata’ib Hezbollah (KH) that has coordinated Iraqi militants to fight on behalf of the Assad regime in the Syrian civil war.[125] Nujaba operates as its own independent group, albeit under the control of the IRGC QF, and is viewed by experts as one of the more active and public groups when it comes to kinetic action and online activity.[126]

Mohammed al-Tabatabai (unknown-present): Tabatabai is among AAH’s core leaders. He became a trusted friend of Qais al-Khazali while studying under Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr in the 1990s.[127] He is sometimes described as the deputy leader of AAH.[128]

Hassan Salem (unknown-present): Salem was believed to be the head of AAH’s militia branch in 2012 when the group carried out a series of political assassinations.[129] Salem has also served as a member of the Iraqi Parliament and the leader of the al-Sadiqoon party, AAH’s main political wing, within parliament.[130] Salem began his term in parliament after al-Sadiqoon won one seat in the 2014 parliamentary elections. Salem was re-elected in 2018 as a candidate for the Fatah Coalition, a political umbrella of which al-Sadiqoon was a member.[131] As of June 2025, Salem continues to serve in parliament.

Qasem Soleimani (2006-2020): Major General Qasem Soleimani was the commander of the Quds Force, the division within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in charge of extra-national militant activities and clandestine operations. Although not a member of AAH, Soleimani was responsible for establishing and funding the group. He is believed to have wielded considerable authority among AAH’s leadership. For instance, Soleimani personally supervised and directed AAH’s activities from their founding, and he even acted to mediate internal conflict among the group’s leadership.[132] Soleimani was killed in a U.S. drone strike near Baghdad International Airport on January 3, 2020.[133]

Esmail Ghaani (2006-present): Brigadier General Esmail Ghaani is the commander of the IRGC QF. He was Qasem Soleimani’s deputy from 1997 and succeeded him following the January 2020 drone strike.[134] Ghaani kept a significantly lower profile than Soleimani and primarily focused on managing internal IRGC QF day to day operations and projects in Afghanistan and Pakistan., and reports indicate he does not have a strong control of Arabic.[135] While experts initially questioned his ability to replace Soleimani, he has been able to influence and more successfully coordinate Iran’s access of resistance across the Middle East, including by engineering the political strategy that allowed AAH and other Shia militias to take power in Iraq following the 2021 elections.[136] Ghaani was reportedly killed in the major Israeli strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities and the IRGC leadership on June 13, 2025.[137] However, on June 24, Ghaani reportedly appeared at demonstrations in Tehran.[138] Ghaani is deputized by IRGC-QF Deputy Commander Brigadier general Mohammad Reza Fallahzadeh and IRGC-QF commander for Iraq Brigadier General Hajji Hamid Nasseri.[139]

Sheikh Baqr al-Saeedi (unknown-present): Sheikh Baqr al-Saeedi is the head of AAH special operations and manages the illicit businesses that help fund AAH.[140]

Abu Ameer al-Musawi (unknown-present): Abu Ameer al-Musawi (AKA Haider Kadhim), reports to Sheikh Baqr al-Saeedi and is responsible for AAH smuggling operations. He is the cousin of Qais al-Khazali and Laith al-Khazali.[141]

Wissam Abdal-Amir al-Bazouni (unknown-present): Wissam Abdal-Amir al-Bazouni is the head of AAH special operations and smuggling for the Basra province. He reports to Sheikh Baqr al-Saeedi.[142]

Adnan Fayan (unknown-present): Adnan Fayhan al-Dulaymi is an AAH member and a Sadiqioun politician. He served as an MP in the Iraqi Parliament and was named governor of the Babil province in 2024. Prior to politics, Fayhan was an AAH leader and organized the January 2007 attack on Karbala that killed five Americans (four were executed). Prior to joining AAH, Fayan was a member of the Mahdi Army.[143]

Hussein Al-Samahi (unknown-present): Hussein al Samahi is the commander of the PMF Baghdad Operations Command. He is affiliated with AAH and fought in Syria with Iran backed militias to support the Assad regime. He has also reportedly fought against Sadr forces during the August 2022 protests.[144]

Safaa al-Saadi (unknown-present): Safaa al-Saadi is AAH affiliated and the commander of the PMF Salah al-Din Operations Command.[145]

Jawad al-Talibawi (unknown-present): Jawad al-Talibawi is an AAH member close to Qais al-Khazali. He has been described both as AAH’s spokesperson and chief of security. He has a visible social media presence and has been sent to important diplomatic events, including the funeral of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.[146]

Salim Ahmed Said (unknown-unknown): Salim Ahmed Said is a UAE based Iraqi-British businessman. While not technically a member of AAH, Said plays a critical role in AAH’s illicit oil smuggling business. Said is associated with the. Al-Iraqia Shipping Services & Oil Trading FZE (AISSOT) and has several subsidiaries and tankers under his control.[147]

Ali Al-Maarij (unknown-present): Ali al-Maarij is the AAH affiliated Deputy Oil Minister of Iraq. Prior to becoming the Deputy Oil Minister in 2023, al-Maarij was the director of the Maysan Oil Company and served on the Oil and Gas committee in parliament. He also was the head of contracts and licensing in the ministry of oil.[148]

Ali Turki (unknown-present): Ali Turki is a Sadiquoun member of parliament and a former AAH fighter. He is an active voice on social media for AAH and Sadiquoun efforts.[149]

Naeem al-Aboudi (2006-present): Naeem al-Aboudi is the AAH backed Minister of Higher Education in Iraq. Experts describe him as an ideologue who has been part of AAH since its inception.[150]

Ahmed al-Tayyar (unknown-present): Ahmed al-Tayyar is the Deputy Director of the Iraqi National Security Service, the domestic intelligence agency. He has served in the role since 2023 and was previously an AAH fighter.[151]

Size Estimates
  • 2007: 3,000 (Associated Press/Fox News) [154]     
  • February 9, 2014: 1,000 – 5,000 (The Washington Post)[155]
  • March 15, 2015: 10,000 (Voice of America)[156]
  • August 2019: 10,000 (Combating Terrorism Center, USMA West Point)[157]
  • October 2020: 15,000 (U.S. Department of Justice, citing Iran Wire)[158]
  • April 2024: 10,000-15,000 (U.S. Department of State)[159]
Name Changes

Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq (“League of the Righteous” in Arabic) is also known as the Khazali Network or the Khazali Special Groups Network.[152] The group was also briefly known as Ashab al-Kahf (“Companions of the Cave” in Arabic) around the time of its initial breakaway from the Mahdi Army.[153]

Resources

AAH receives extensive funding from the Iranian government – particularly from the IRGC-QF. In 2014, Iraqi intelligence officials estimated that AAH received between 1.5-2 million USD per month from the IRGC.[160] This money was channeled to AAH through IRGC-QF commander Major General Qasem Soleimani and his successor Brigadier General Esmail Ghaani. In addition to direct funding, the Quds Force has provided training and equipment for AAH soldiers. New AAH recruits have been sent to either Iran or Hezbollah training camps for a two-week training course before being deployed in the field.[161] Iran has also paid the families of killed AAH fighters up to $5,000 and covered the fallen fighter’s burial cost.[162] With the rise of its oil funding streams, it is unclear how much money AAH receives directly from Iran in 2025.

Like many of its militia counterparts, AAH controls several checkpoints within Iraq from which they can extort travelers and businesses. Most notably, AAH reportedly controls the al-Abayji checkpoint on the highway between Baghdad and southern Salah ad-Din province (netting roughly $30,000 daily for the group) and the al-Ghalibiya checkpoint east of Baghdad (earning $10-20,000 daily).[163] The group also controls several ordnance factories in Nahrawan, Bismayah, and Jurf al-Nasr.[164] As of 2025, AAH and militias continue to use checkpoints and forced “protection” as a strategy to extort trucks and travelers.[165] Additionally, unconfirmed reports in 2015 alleged that AAH has received funding from former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and that some AAH fighters have been recruited into a special paramilitary force led by Maliki himself. Maliki, too, receives significant aid and support from Iran.[166]

As a member of the PMF, AAH accesses to the Defense Ministry’s budgetary allocation to PMF units. The 2021 Iraqi federal budget allocated roughly $3.14 billion for the PMF – nearly 50% more than the previous budget of 2019.[167] However, it is unclear exactly how much of this total AAH receives. In 2024, the PMF budget totaled $3.5 billion – though it remains unclear how much AAH receives.[168]

AAH utilizes military equipment made in the United States, Iran, Russia, and other nations. The Iraqi militias, including AAH, often utilize small arms such as Kalashnikov (AK) style rifles (made in Iraq, Iran, China, and elsewhere), European or American manufactured HK or M16 style rifles (these are more expensive), DShK machine guns, SVD style rifles, among others.[169] In addition to small arms, the militias in Iraq utilize RPG-7 style grenade launchers; various Iranian, North Korean, and Chinese made man-portable air defense systems (MANPADS); and Iranian, American, and Swedish guided anti-tank munitions.[170] AAH utilizes less advanced improvised rocket-assisted munition (IRAM) artillery. These systems include multiple versions of 107 mm and 122 mm multi-barrel rocket launchers (MBRL) that hold 4-12 rockets, as well as 333mm IRAMs that use a rail based launching system.[171] AAH also deploys small commercial quadcopter unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) that carry explosives in its operations.[172]

In its fight against the Islamic State, AAH was pictured with significant mobilized assets. In March 2016, reports surfaced on international media outlets that AAH and KH operated U.S.-made vehicles and other military equipment in Samarra, where the two militias were engaged against IS.[173] Experts observed AAH utilizing Soviet T-72M1 main battle tanks, American M113 armored personnel carriers, Russian BTR-50PK and BTR-80UP armored personnel carriers and various light armored vehicles. The vehicles were often equipped with light weapons, including DShKM, M2, Nasir AGLs, and 2A14 autocannons.[174] AAH and other Iraqi militias appeared to acquire these arms from the Iraqi government, Iran, online and physical illicit markets, and through stealing equipment from the Iraqi armed forces.[175]

Beginning in 2017, Iran began more actively supplying its proxy groups with longer range missiles, including the Zelzal, Fateh-110, and Zolfaghar, with ranges of 100-700 km.[176] However, it is unclear whether AAH received any of these medium-range ballistic missiles, and no AAH attacks have utilized such arms. In addition to rockets, Iran has stepped up its supply of large UAVs to the paramilitaries in Iraq, including the Mohajer-6 drones. However, experts assess that most, if not all of these systems, are under KH control.[177]

AAH is also heavily involved in the Iraqi oil smuggling industry. Between 2016 and 2018, AAH worked with then future Prime Minister and then Minister of Oil Adel ‘Abd al-Mahdi to influence the sector. Under Prime Minister Sudani, AAH continued to hold power the sector. AAH works closely with several players in the oil smuggling industry, including Salim Ahmad Said (also known as Hajj Omaid Ahmad), who owns Al-Iraqia Shipping Services & Oil Trading FZE (AISSOT) and ten large oil tankers. AAH also controls the Oil Products Distribution Company, the state-owned subsidiary that moves oil around the country, and the Ministry of Oil’s technical directorate. In addition to controlling the oil, AAH manages infrastructure needed for smuggling, oil production, and import/export, including the scrap metal market and several major asphalt plants and companies. Effectively, AAH is able to award contracts to its own companies to transport oil, with little to no oversight. AAH smuggles oil across borders and will often mix Iranian oil with Iraqi oil to beat Iran sanctions and use the funds to finance illicit and militia activity.[178] For a detailed investigation into the Iraqi Oil smuggling industry, see Michael Knights’ 2025 “Iraqi Oil and the Iran Threat Network.” paper in the CTC Sentinel.

Locations

Disclaimer: This is a partial list of where the militant organization has bases and where it operates. This does not include information on where the group conducts major attacks or has external influences.

AAH operates primarily in Iraq and is headquartered in Baghdad, where it has multiple political offices. It also maintains offices in al-Khalis, Basra, Tal Afar, Hillah, and Najaf and has contacts with tribal leaders in Dhi-Qar, Muthanna, and Maysan provinces.[179] After Khazali was released from custody in 2010, he and other AAH leaders relocated to Iran to manage AAH operations. After the U.S. withdrawal in 2011, the majority of AAH’s leadership returned to Baghdad.[180] Between 2014 and 2017, AAH participated in anti-IS operations as part of the Popular Mobilization Forces across northern, western, and central Iraq,[181] including battles in the Salah al-Din, Ninewa, Anbar, Najaf, Diyala provinces and Baghdad.[182]

While elements of AAH fought alongside Hezbollah in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon War, AAH significantly expanded its operations outside of Iraq in 2011. In 2011, the group established a political presence in Lebanon and sent representatives to meet with Hezbollah, Hamas, and Lebanese government officials.[183] Following the expansion of the Islamic State in 2013, Iran ordered AAH to send fighters to Syria to fight alongside Hezbollah and Assad. [184] AAH then deployed throughout Syria, participating in battles against the Islamic State along the Iraqi border and in Aleppo.[185] AAH and Kata’ib Hezbollah also formed a front group led by Akram Kabi, Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, to provide military support to the Assad regime in Syria.[186] AAH and other Iran backed groups fled Syria in December 2024 when Assad fell to HTS.[187]

Since 2017, AAH primarily operates within Iraq, including in the Baghdad, Salah al-Din, Kirkuk, Diyala, and Ninewa provinces.[188] AAH affiliated commanders lead the PMF Baghdad Operations Command and Salah ad-Din Operations Command.[189]

In 2019, observers estimated that AAH was the most powerful political and economic actor in the region of Iraq between the cities of Samarra and Baghdad. Moreover, the U.S. government estimated in October 2020 that AAH wielded de facto control of the northern Baghdad belts – the exurbs and rural areas surrounding the northern edges of Baghdad.[190] The group maintains training sites in Basra, Karbala, Jurf al-Nasr, and Jalula, as well as ordnance factories in Nahrawan, Bismayah, and Jurf al-Nasr.[191] AAH also controls various checkpoints, from which they extract revenue by levying illegal taxes on passing vehicles.[192] AAH also owns oil, asphalt, and scrap metal plants throughout Iraq that it uses to conduct both illicit and legal business activities.[193] In 2019, experts assessed that AAH was making significant inroads among the Shia Turkmen of southern Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah provinces – a territory traditionally dominated by the Badr Organization.[194]

Strategy

Vertical Tabs

Ideology and Goals

AAH is a Shiite organization that promotes the ideals of the Iranian Revolution, most notably the doctrine of Wilayat al-Faqih (“guardianship of the jurists” in Arabic). Wilayat al-Faqih entails the complete implementation of political Shiism under a faqih, or Islamic jurist, who is entrusted with temporal political authority over God’s people. Ruhollah Khomeini developed the doctrine in the 1970s and established Iran’s post-revolutionary theocratic government.[195]

AAH is often called a Khomeinist organization and follows Iran’s current Grand Ayatollah and leader, Ali Khamenei, as their marja’ – an eminent Shiite cleric to whom followers look for political and spiritual guidance. In line with its allegiance to Iran and the principles of the Iranian Revolution, AAH seeks to institute a Shia Islamic government in Iraq by establishing the shariah as the country’s sole legal system and entrusting governance to a qualified jurist. AAH shares considerable ideological overlap with Hezbollah in Lebanon and other Khomeinist groups in Iraq.[196] AAH also retains a close spiritual allegiance to Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, one of Iraq’s most famous and revered Shiite clerics.[197] AAH’s founder, Qais al-Khazali was a student of Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr at the Shia Hawza Religious Institute in al-Najaf.[198] Experts assess that Khazali’s worldview is shaped by Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, and specifically that it is his duty to support the poor and the oppressed, both within and outside of Iraq’s borders.[199]

During the U.S. occupation of Iraq, AAH’s goal was to expel U.S. troops from Iraq.[200]  Following the U.S. withdrawal in 2011, AAH sought to rebrand itself as an Iraqi nationalist political organization rather than an explicitly anti-Western group. Despite its attempts to portray itself as nationalist, AAH promotes Iranian interests in Iraq and pursues closer links between the two states.[201] Khazali will often explain this by arguing that he is an Iraqi nationalist with “100 percent patriotic motives,” but can excuse his actions by arguing that Iranian and Iraqi militia interests cross over.[202]

Ultimately, AAH aims to establish a Shia-controlled state and implement the shariah throughout Iraq. Concurrently, the group also sought to support the Assad regime in Syria and prevent the anti-Shia Islamic State advance in both Syria and Iraq.[203]

Political Activities

Following the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq in December 2011, AAH declared its intention to join the Iraqi political process and transition away from militancy.[204] By 2012, AAH rebranded itself as a nationalist Shiite political party.[205] The group established political offices in Baghdad, al-Khalis, Basra, Tal Afar, Hillah, and Najaf. AAH also sent political delegations to meet with tribal leaders in Dhi-Qar, Muthanna, and Maysan provinces, and it began providing charitable services to Shiite communities across the country.

AAH’s entry into formal politics drew the ire of the Sadrists – a political movement consisting mainly of Shiite Islamist, Iraqi nationalists that follow Muqtada al-Sadr, an influential Shiite cleric in Iraq. Previously the Sadrists were the primary allies of Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon coalition in Parliament and had a tense relationship with AAH; Muqtada al-Sadr stated in 2010 that he would not allow AAH to participate in politics because of the group’s history of “murdering Iraqi civilians.”[206] AAH’s political conversion appeared to tip the balance of power in Parliament away from the Sadrists by creating a new potential ally for Maliki/Dawlat al-Qanoon.[207] In addition this parliamentary rivalry, the two groups’ histories and competing Shiite Islamist ideologies made cooperation unlikely, if not impossible. AAH was formed in 2006 by defectors from Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army who sought strategic autonomy and closer political and military ties to Iran.[208] In addition, both groups wished to become the preeminent social and political organization among Iraqi Shia.[209] In the 2014 Iraqi parliamentary elections, AAH’s political party, al-Sadiqoon, won its first seat in Parliament and allied with Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon coalition.[210]

AAH has a considerable media presence through the group’s creation or sponsorship of proprietary media outlets. The outlet “Sabereen News” is an important component of the group’s media strategy and maintains Telegram, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube accounts under that name. With a subscriber base of 80,000 on Telegram – the network’s primary medium – Sabereen serves as a major outlet for the militias’ public relations efforts. Sabereen publishes content primarily from AAH and KH, including claims of responsibility for major attacks. Analysts believe that Sabereen is closely connected to AAH for three reasons: 1) Sabereen has often professed devotion to AAH leader Qais al-Khazali, stating that it “has answered the call” from him; 2) it has taken AAH’s side during rhetorical spats between AAH and other militias; 3) most glaringly, Sabereen has called for the release of imprisoned AAH personnel with the statement “we are Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.”[211] Experts also assess that the Al-Ahad TV and website are likely connected with AAH.[212]

Before the 2018 parliamentary elections. Sadiqoon stepped up its public presence. The group proved adept at campaigning. It utilized a lively and polished social media presence and provided various public services – such as building schools and sponsoring soccer games.[213] AAH also offered humanitarian aid following earthquakes in northern Sulaymaniyah province in November 2017, though residents ultimately refused to accept AAH’s aid, citing its reported history of human rights abuses.[214] Nevertheless, there were also incidents of violence on the campaign trail. In one notable incident, AAH personnel opened fire on students at the University of al-Qadisiyah after they threw their shoes at AAH leader Qais al-Khazali.[215]

In January 2018, al-Sadiqoon joined a coalition called Fatah al-Mubin (“Manifest Victory” in Arabic) comprised primarily of Iraqi militias supported by Iran, such as KH, AAH, the Badr Organization, and Kata’ib Imam Ali.[216] Hadi al-Ameri, the leader of the Badr Organization, led the Fatah Coalition from its founding until his resignation in June 2020.[217] It appears as though Fatah is the political wing of Iran’s broader effort to gain more influence in Iraq, given the inclinations of many of its leaders and constituent parties towards Tehran and its religious authorities: the Badr leader, Hadi al-Amiri, stated Fatah “is the same project of Imam Khomeini,” referring to Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of Iran’s theocratic government.[218]

In Iraq’s May 2018 parliamentary elections, Fatah won 47 out of 329 seats, the second most behind Muqtada al-Sadr’s Sairoon alliance (which won 54 seats). AAH’s Sadiqouon won 15 of Fatah’s 47 total seats.[219] Fatah struck a deal with Maliki’s State of Law coalition and Prime Minister Abadi’s coalition.[220] Following fights over forming a government, the group then formed a coalition with Sairoon to form a government with Adel ‘Abd al-Mahdi as Prime Minister.[221]

AAH and Fatah use their considerable political power to advance their own interests and align Iraq’s politics closer to Iran. For example, in the lead-up to the 2018 elections, spokesmen for AAH made their interest in expelling U.S. forces clear.[222] Months later, in January 2020, AAH-aligned lawmakers within Fatah played a substantial role in orchestrating the passage of a parliamentary resolution calling on the government to expel U.S. troops from Iraq following the death of IRGC-Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani.[223]

Due to mass protests, economic turmoil, and frustration with Iranian influence, Mahdi’s government collapsed and he resigned as Prime Minister.[224] While AAH did not support Mustafa al-Kadhimi as Prime Minister, following a drawn-out fight in Parliament and getting control of the Labour and Social Affairs Minister Position, AAH and Fatah agreed to support him.[225] The appointment of Kadhimi was viewed as a disappointment to the Iran backed groups, given Kadhimi’s background with the Iraqi Intelligence and relationship with the United States.[226]

Alongside its broader efforts to expand its influence in the government, AAH sponsors street protests. In December 2019, AAH organized militia-led demonstrations near the U.S. embassy compound in central Baghdad. AAH leader Qais al-Khazali attended the demonstration, alongside then-KH leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis and Badr Organization leader Hadi al-Amiri.[227] The demonstrations escalated into an attack on the U.S. embassy by protestors.[228]

In the 2021 elections, AAH, Badr, and KH, among others, formed the Fatah alliance and partnered with other Iran backed allies such as Nouri al-Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon coalition. However, Sadr dominated the election, winning 73 seats to al-Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon coalition 33 and the Fatah Alliance’s 17.[229] AAH and Badr supporters protested the loss and demanded recounts of the ballots – along with a wave of violence and threats against Iraqi security services and Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi. On November 5, 2021 AAH supporters fought against Iraqi security services, killing between 1-3 individuals and injuring over 100.[230] Khazali then gave a speech threatening Kadhimi at the protests.[231] AAH and other militias attempted to assassinate Mustafa al-Kadhimi with several small drones in November 2021. The plan failed but several of Kadhimi’s security team were injured.[232]

Despite the electoral loss and the unchecked violence, AAH and Iran retained power and influence over Iraq. The IRGC QF and Nouri al-Maliki worked with Iraq Supreme Judicial Court Head Judge to rule that a two-thirds majority was required to form a government, which prevented Sadr from doing so without the support of al-Maliki and the Fatah coalition.[233] Sadr then ordered all 73 of the MPs in his party to resign.[234] This allowed AAH and Maliki, along with Badr and other groups, to form a government and install Mohammad Shia al-Sudani and Prime Minister.[235] With Sudani in power, AAH purged the government and security services of Kadhimi loyalists and installed its supporters in key government roles. This gave AAH extreme influence over the security sector, the Ministry of Education, and the Ministry of Oil.[236]

Within the government, between 2021 to 2025, AAH pressured al-Sudani and other leaders to act favorably toward itself and Iran, including pushing the United States out of Iraq,[237] allowing continued militia armament,[238] and refusing to normalize relationships with the HTS government in Syria.[239] During this period, Khazali and AAH conducted outreach to Kurdistan Region President Nechirvan Barzani, at appears open to friendlier relationships with the KDP and the Iraqi Kurds.[240]

To support and legitimize its political efforts, since 2019, Khazali and AAH MPs have met with western officials. These include U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres,[241] Special Representative of the U.N. Secretary-General (SRSG) to Iraq Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert,[242] and the Australian Ambassador to Iraq, along with a visit by the AAH backed Iraqi Minister of Education to the United Kingdom.[243]

Iraq is scheduled to hold parliamentary elections in November 2025. While in 2018 and 2021, AAH was allied with Fatah, including the Badr Organization, Nouri al-Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon coalition, and Prime Minister Sudani, as of June 2025 there appear to be fractures within the coalition. Nouri al-Maliki and Qais Khazali are heavily critical of Prime Minister Sudani, especially over his choice to meet with Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, and Maliki’s coalition does not plan on running with Sudani.[244] Khazali also plans on running separately but does not rule out forming a government with Sudani if he succeeds in the elections. Each bloc is competing with each other for power over both the Iraqi government and different sectors, including Iraqi security agencies, and is attempting to put themselves in the best position following the election. Maliki sees both Sudani and Khazali as rivals, but would work with them if it increased his influence.[245] In addition to desiring more influence over the government, the split has also been caused by several policy issues. Khazali and Maliki both aim to push Faleh Fayyad out of his position as chairman of the PMF, which would allow more Iranian control.[246] AAH has also clashed with another Fatah coalition member, the Badr organization, as both fought over control of the Speaker of the Iraqi Parliament role in 2024.[247]

Targets And Tactics

United States and Iraqi Government

AAH’s primary target, since its inception in 2006, is U.S. personnel and allied forces in Iraq. During the Iraq war between 2003-2011, AAH utilized a mix of improvised explosive devices and explosively formed penetrators (EFPs), indirect fire mortars and rockets, and sniper fire in attacks against the United States. AAH also conducted sectarian violence during the war, such as kidnappings and assassinations, against Sunni Iraqis and political opponents, including Sadrists (for a full list of AAH weapons and resources, please see the resources section and for a full list of major attacks, please see the major attacks section).[248] In recent years, AAH and Khazali have also adopted similar tactics to target Iraqi officials, including the drone attacks against Prime Minister al-Kadhimi’s residence[249] and indirect fire rockets against the INIS headquarters.[250]

In 2020 following the fall of IS and the U.S. drone strike against Qasem Soleimani AAH and its partner militias revamped their campaign against the United States.[251] Observers believe that AAH switched to using so-called “shadow groups.” These groups – many of which were formed by the militias shortly after the deaths of Qasem Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis in early 2020 – reportedly claim responsibility for attacks in order to create plausible deniability for AAH.[252] Other major militant groups in Iraq, such as Kata’ib Hezbollah and the Badr Organization, use these shadow groups for the same purpose. AAH likely used this tactic when, on November 17, 2020, rockets fell near the U.S. embassy compound in central Baghdad in violation of the unilaterally-imposed “truce” between major Shiite militant groups and the United States.[253] Sabereen News which is linked to AAH, almost immediately reported via Telegram that a group named Ashab al-Kahf (“Companions of the Cave,” in Arabic) had claimed responsibility for the attack.[254] Ashab al-Kahf has previously stated that it is not affiliated with any existing militia groups.[255] However, analysts have generally concluded that AAH used Ashab al-Kahf as a front in order to appear compliant with the truce while continuing its militant campaign.[256] AAH continued this practice between 2020-2023, conducting kidnappings, various indirect fire using 107mm and 122mm rockets, and small drones against U.S. targets in Baghdad, without directly claiming many of the operations (see Major Attacks for a list of operations likely undertaken by AAH).[257] AAH slowed down its kinetic operations against the United States in 2024 and 2025 – conducting no major attacks.

 

Islamic State

Between 2013 and 2018, AAH’s primary target was the Islamic State rather than the United States. AAH fought with the PMF across Iraq and Syria and functioned like a traditional military, participating in major battles against IS.[258]  Founded in 2014, the PMF is a state-sponsored umbrella group composed of approximately forty Iraqi militias, the largest number and most powerful of which are Shia.[259] Lacking a strong regular security force, the Iraqi government relied on its partnership with these volunteer PMF militias, including AAH, to liberate IS-held areas.[260] The Iraqi government organized the PMF in response to Ayatollah Sistani’s 2014 non-sectarian fatwa that called for Iraqis to form “popular” militias to resist IS’ offensive into Iraq.[261] Experts assess that the PMF played a central role in the defeat of the Islamic State.[262] As a member of the Popular Mobilization Forces, AAH engaged in limited cooperation with U.S. troops but also remained hostile toward the United States. For example, in 2016, AAH released a statement threatening to attack U.S. personnel in Iraq.[263]

AAH has also targeted IS affiliated groups. These include Jaysh al-Rijal al-Tariq al-Naqshabandia (JRTN), a Sufi militant group led by former Ba’ath Party leaders operating in Iraq. AAH claimed that its militants assassinated Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, Saddam Hussein’s former second in command and the leader of the JRTN, on April 17, 2015. AAH’s hostility towards JRTN stemmed from the latter’s alignment with jihadist groups, including the Islamic State.[264]

 

Iraqi Civilians

AAH has been accused of human rights violations and violence against civilians. The group reportedly conducted purges of anti-Maliki Sunni tribesmen in Iraq’s southern provinces to ensure a Shiite demographic majority.[265] A 2014 report corroborated these claims and accused AAH of killing 109 Sunni tribesmen between March and July 2014 in the towns surrounding Baghdad.[266] Even with IS significantly depleted, AAH forces continued to target Sunni civilians, including the massacre of eight civilians in al-Farhatiya in October 2020.[267]

The Iraqi government, and namely Iran backed Prime Minister’s Nouri al-Maliki, Adel ‘Abd al-Mahdi, and Muhammed Shia al-Sudani have used AAH in place of Iraqi security forces and to carry out violence against civilians and protestors. Under Maliki, AAH carried out violence against Sunnis and was known as the armed support for his government.[268] Under Prime Minister Sudani, during the 2019 protests against the government,[269] PMF forces, including AAH were used to aggressively crack down on civilians. AAH has worked alongside regular security forces to suppress demonstrations and intimidate protesters, including by deploying snipers on rooftops overlooking major protest sites.[270] AAH and other militias have also been accused of carrying out the kidnappings and killings of prominent protest movement leaders and civil activists in Iraq.[271] During protests, AAH clashed with members of Muqtada al-Sadr’s Saraya al-Salam that had sided with protesters in the southeastern city of Amarah.[272] AAH and its leader Qais al-Khazali have denied all accusations levied against the group.[273]

Attacks

Disclaimer: These are some selected major attacks in the militant organization's history. It is not a comprehensive listing but captures some of the most famous attacks or turning points during the campaign.

July-August 2006: Elements of AAH fought alongside Hezbollah in the 2006 Lebanon-Israeli War (unknown killed, unknown wounded).[274]

October 10, 2006: AAH used mortars to attack U.S. Forward Operating Base Falcon outside of Baghdad (unknown killed, unknown wounded).[275]

May 6, 2006: AAH shot down a British Lynx helicopter in Basra (5 killed, unknown wounded).[276]

January 20, 2007: AAH militants attacked and captured the Karbala provincial government headquarters, killing five U.S. soldiers in the process. The Khazali brothers and Ali Musa Daqduq, who planned and led the attack, were captured by U.S. forces shortly after the attack (5 killed, unknown wounded).[277]

May 29, 2007: AAH forces attacked the Iraqi Finance Ministry, capturing British contractor Peter Moore and his four bodyguards. AAH released Moore in December 2009 in exchange for the release of Qais al-Khazali by the Iraqi government. AAH killed his four bodyguards (4 killed, unknown wounded).[278]

February 2010: AAH captured U.S. Department of Defense contractor Issa T. Salomi. Salomi was released in March 2010 in return for the release of four AAH fighters held by the Iraqi government (0 killed, 0 wounded).[279]

November 14, 2011: An AAH roadside bomb killed a U.S. soldier in Baghdad. AAH claimed responsibility for a roadside bomb. The attack was the final U.S. servicemember killed in Iraq prior to the 2011 withdrawal. (1 killed, unknown wounded).[280]

August 10, 2012: AAH forces captured a Sunni Mosque in the Al-Amin al-Thaniyah district of Baghdad and converted it to a Shiite mosque (unknown killed, unknown wounded).[281]

September 2012: AAH led the operation to recapture the city of Amerli, Iraq from the Islamic State (unknown killed, unknown wounded).[282]

March-April 2014: According to Human Rights Watch, AAH killed 109 Sunni men in the villages surrounding Baghdad between March and April 2014 (at least 109 killed, unknown wounded).[283]

October 2017: AAH participated in the offensive on the city of Kirkuk, Iraq. It is suspected that Iran played a significant role in recapturing this territory from the Islamic State (unknown killed, unknown wounded).[284]

November 2017: AAH participated in the offensive on the city Al-Qa’im, located near the Iraq-Syria border. The group was spotted using what appears to be an Iranian T-72 tank (unknown killed, unknown wounded).[285]

November 2017: AAH participated in the offensive to recapture the city of Abu Kamal, located near the Iraq-Syria border. This town was strategically significant and enabled Iran to set up a supply route from Iran to Lebanon that would allow Iran to provide aid to Hezbollah (unknown killed, unknown wounded).[286]

December 31, 2019: AAH organized and participated in mass demonstrations near and attack on the U.S. embassy compound in central Baghdad.[287] AAH leader Qais al-Khazali appeared among demonstrators at the embassy compound (0 killed, unknown wounded).[288]

October 17, 2020: the AAH affiliated 42nd PMF Brigade killed eight Sunni civilians and left four others missing in al-Farhatiyah in southern Salah ad-Din, Iraq. AAH announced that it would cooperate with any investigation and punish those found responsible. [289] While no investigation has been completed, the U.S. Department of State reported that the families of the victims blamed the 42nd PMF Brigade. The attack was part of a wider trend of Iraqi security force and PMF operations against Sunnis and other ethnic minorities. [290]

November 17, 2020: AAH launched rockets at the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad. Ashab al-Kahf claimed the attack but experts assess that AAH was also responsible and that, at the time, Ashab al-Kahf had direct ties to AAH.[291] The attack killed one child and five civilians. No U.S. personnel were harmed (1 killed, 5 injured).[292]

December 20, 2020: AAH launched rockets at the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad. Ashab al-Kahf claimed the attack but experts assess that AAH was also responsible and Ashab al-Kahf has direct ties to AAH.[293] The attack damaged the U.S. Embassy compound and killed one civilian (1 killed, 0 injured).[294]

February 17-22, 2021: On February 17, Saraya Awliya al-Dam launched 14 107mm rockets at the U.S. airbase in Erbil, Iraq. Experts assess that Saraya Awliya al-Dam is a front group for AAH. [295] This salvo was followed by attacks on February 20 against the U.S. Balad Airbase in Salah al-Din, injuring one,[296] and on February 22 against the Baghdad international zone.[297] The United States responded to the attack by striking Kata’ib Hezbollah and Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada, possibly indicating that the U.S. found these two groups to be responsible (1 killed, 9 injured).[298]

October-November 2021: AAH organized and participated in mass demonstrations in central Baghdad following heavy losses in the 2021 Iraqi parliamentary elections, purging of AAH and KH associated officials from ministries and agencies, and prosecution of AAH associated officials. Protestors entered the green zone and threw rocks at security forces who fired live rounds into the air. Qais al-Khazali gave a speech at the protests accusing the Iraqi government of electoral fraud and threatening Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi. (1-3 killed, 125 injured).[299]

October 31, 2021: AAH launched Katyusha four rockets at the INIS headquarters in the Green Zone of Baghdad, hitting a section of the Red Crescent hospital, a water treatment plant, and an unused bank. The rockets were launched from the AAH controlled Shula area of North Baghdad (0 killed, 0 wounded).[300]

November 7, 2021: AAH, in partnership with KH, attacked the residence of Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi in the green zone in Baghdad using two to three quadcopters drones in an assassination attempt. Experts found that AAH members Abbas Shams al-Din, Ali Mohsen Balasim, al-Lami and Haider Mohammed al-Khalqani carried out the attack – with support from Qais al-Khazali, Laith al-Khazali, and KH. AAH denied involvement and said it was a false flag attack (0 killed, several wounded).[301]

August 2022-September 2022: AAH fighters clashed with protestors loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr in Basra. The clashes followed mass demonstrations by Sadr supporters in August 2022. Attacks included fighting in the streets and assaults on the AAH and Saraya al-Salam headquarters. (4 killed, unknown wounded).[302]

November 7, 2022: Members of AAH, Nujaba, and KH killed Stephen Troell, an American aid worker in Baghdad in an apparent kidnapping gone wrong. The cell was managed by an IRGC QF captain and the attack was carried out with his knowledge. Experts identified the shooter Ali Abdal-Ridha Salih Alwan al-Batbuti (aka Ali Fafona), as a son-in-law of AAH leadership member Jawad al-Talibawi.[303]

October 2023-Present: AAH was potentially involved with the drone and rocket campaign conducted by the Islamic Resistance in Iran, a collection of the Iran proxies based in Iraq. AAH did not claim any attacks and experts assess they likely provided logistics and propaganda support instead of directly carrying out operations.[304] Experts highlight two attacks, on October 19, 2023 against the U.S. annex at the Baghdad airport and December 8, 2023 at the U.S. Embassy as operations potentially carried out by AAH. The analysis is based on the Baghdad location, the lack of claim by IRI, and the style of the attack. Additionally, Laith al-Khazali, the central figure within AAH kinetic activity, often operates across boundaries and is hesitant to claim his attacks.[305] (0 killed, 0 wounded).[306]

December 2023-February 2024: AAH fighters clashed with members of Saraya al-Salam and forces loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr throughout Iraq. Clashes began in Basra on December 25, 2023 and have included assassinations, shootouts in the street, and arson at each organizations’ headquarters. (200 killed, unknown wounded).[307]

March 31, 2024: AAH fighters clashed with the Iraqi Federal Police in eastern Baghdad. One police officer was killed in the fighting. (1 killed, 2 wounded).[308]

Interactions

Vertical Tabs

Designated / Listed
  • The U.S. Department of State designed AAH as a Foreign Terrorist Organization: January 2020 to present.[309]
  • The U.S. Department of the Treasury designated AAH leader Qais al-Khazali and his brother for human rights abuses: December 2019 to present.[310]
  • The U.S. Department of State designated AAH leader Qais al-Khazali and his brother Laith al-Kahzali as Specially Designated Global Terrorists: January 2020 to present.[311]
  • The U.S. Department of State designated Akram al-Kabi, who led AAH while Khazali was in government custody and, as of May 2021, leads Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist: March 2019 to present.[312]
  • The U.S. Department of Treasury sanctioned Hamad al-Moussawi, the owner and president of Al-Huda bank, for laundering money on behalf of the IRGC QF to support KH and AAH: January 2024 to present.[313]
Community Relations

Before it entered the Iraqi political process in 2011, AAH did not have a significant relationship with the broader Iraqi Shiite community. Since then, the group has built widespread support among Iraqi Shia, becoming what observers describe as a “parochial” group – one with substantial social relations and a defined political power base.[314] AAH and its political party, al-Sadiqoon, established political offices across Iraq, run candidates in parliamentary elections, and formed significant relationships with tribal leaders.[315] AAH also provided social services to the Shiite tribes in southern Iraq. The group established a network of religious schools across the region and sponsored public entertainment events such as soccer games.[316] AAH also offered humanitarian aid following earthquakes in northern Sulaymaniyah province in November 2017, though residents ultimately refused to accept AAH’s aid, citing its reported history of human rights abuses.[317] In November 2018, AAH provided aid to those affected by flash floods in central Iraq.[318]

AAH holds a tenuous relationship with members of the Sunni community in Iraq and has persecuted Sunnis on several occasions. Amnesty International accused AAH of mistreating Sunnis in areas liberated from the Islamic State. For example, AAH allegedly raided Sunni homes in Kirkuk without cause.[319] AAH reportedly intimidated and extorted Sunni tribal groups. Throughout the group’s campaigns against U.S. and Iraqi military installations, AAH targeted Sunni tribes in the areas along the Tigris between the cities of Samarra and Baghdad.[320] In October 2020, the AAH affiliated 42nd PMF brigade massacred eight civilians in al-Farhatiyah, southern Salah ad-Din province. The U.S. Department of State reported that the al-Farhatiyah massacre appeared to be another episode in a series of retaliatory abuses committed by Shiite sectarian militants against Sunni civilians.[321] The U.S. State Department also found that AAH sought to intimidate Christian civilians into leaving their homes in the Christian-majority Bartella area of Ninewa province and that AAH converted several Sunni mosques in Diyala province into PMF headquarters.[322]

During the fall 2019 protests, AAH came under considerable scrutiny from the Iraqi public. Protesters accused the PMF and the major constituents therein – AAH included – of participating in the state’s crackdown on demonstrations. Violence carried out by Iraqi security forces and PMF militants killed over 600 protesters.[323]

The PMF is an important source of influence and recruitment for AAH, and it has helped AAH make significant inroads among the Iraqi Shia.[324] Due to their instrumental role in the fight against the Islamic State (IS), many Iraqis view the militias as vital to the state’s security apparatus.[325] Public opinion polls conducted in the aftermath of IS’s defeat in November 2017 suggest the Iraqi public strongly views militias within the PMF structure as positive contributors to local security – with 91% of Shia respondents and 64.5% of Sunni respondents indicating a positive view of the PMF.[326] Constituent units of the PMF also receive financial and military support from both Iraq and Iran.[327] As part of the PMF, AAH played an instrumental role in the campaign against IS in Iraq. AAH and other PMF militias have also come under significant criticism on human rights grounds for alleged attacks against Sunni civilians and being a source of Iranian influence in Iraq.[328]

Relationships With Other Groups

AAH holds a close relationship with Iran and more specifically the IRGC QF. AAH was one of the Iranian-backed Special Groups, the U.S. military’s name for the Iranian-sponsored Shiite militias fighting against the United States in Iraq between 2003-2011. The Iran-aligned militias operating in Iraq are also referred to as muqawama groups, or “resistance factions” in Arabic. AAH holds good relations with other Iranian-sponsored Shiite militias, both Iraqi and foreign. AAH often appears alongside other muqawama groups to mark important holidays and participate in politically-oriented rallies in support of the muqawama’s goals. AAH notably appeared alongside Kata’ib Hezbollah and the Badr Organization in a 2016 demonstration in Baghdad to mark International Quds Day – a holiday created by Iran to express opposition to Israel and support for the Palestinian cause.[329]

AAH often cooperates with Kata’ib Hezbollah. In 2013, the two groups co-founded Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, a front group based primarily in Syria. AAH and KH used Nujaba to channel militants to support the Assad regime and Hezbollah in their fight against the Islamic State and Islamist-aligned elements of the Syrian opposition.[330] Alongside these two groups, AAH works with Badr, KSS, and Nouri al-Maliki on political and militia activities. The groups joined together to create the Fatah coalition in the build-up to the 2018 elections in Iraq.[331] In response to the U.S. drone strike against Soleimani, AAH partnered with Badr, KSS, and KH to Usbat al-Thaereen (English: League of the Revolutionaries) coalition.[332] And in response to Israel’s war in Gaza, the militias created the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, a coalition of the Iran backed Iraqi militias, [333] and the al-Aqsa joint operations room in October 2023 to coordinate operations.[334]

Despite this close relationship, AAH bickered with KH and Nujaba on several occasions. Between October 2020 and February 2021, AAH and KH disagreed on operations against the United States. KH agreed to limit its attacks against U.S. forces, while AAH wanted to continue. Both groups criticized each other publicly,[335] and KH attacked AAH illicit business interests.[336] KH and Nujaba leadership both criticized Khazali’s lack of kinetic action in response to Israel’s war in Gaza.[337]

AAH also maintains close relations with Lebanese Hezbollah. Hezbollah operatives were responsible for training many of AAH’s initial recruits. Senior Hezbollah operative Ali Mussa Daqduq often served as a liaison between the Iranian government and AAH. Members of AAH fought alongside Hezbollah in the 2006 Lebanon-Israel War and the Syrian civil war in 2011.[338] During a 2017 visit to the Israeli-Lebanon border, Khazali emphasized AAH’s “full readiness to stand united with the Lebanese people and the Palestinian cause in the face of the Israeli occupation.”[339] An AAH spokesperson later clarified that Khazali’s statement was meant to threaten Israeli and express “solidarity with the Lebanese people if the Israeli entity attacks them.”[340] Following the death of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, Jawad al-Talibawi and AAH Deputy Secretary-General Muhammad al-Tabatabai attended Nasrallah’s funeral. Khazali delivered a speech on television pledging to continue supporting Hezbollah.[341] The exact status of this relationship following Israel’s 2024 operations against Hezbollah is unclear.

In addition to Hezbollah, AAH and Iraqi militia relations with Hamas and the Houthis are both increasing. Experts reported that Khazali regularly meets with Houthi leadership in Baghdad, and that in June 2024, the Houthis opened a coordination office near the international zone in Baghdad.[342] Despite these close ties, the Houthis appear to share a closer relationship with KH than AAH, and Houthi fighters are integrating into the PMF through the creation of the Nasrallah battalion[343] and training camps in KH controlled areas.[344] In 2023 or 2024, both Hamas and the Houthis opened heavily guarded offices in Baghdad, and Khazali was pictured with Hamas leadership in August 2024.[345]

AAH is a political rival of Muqtada al-Sadr and the Sadrist movement since it split from the Mahdi Army in 2006. The Sadrist movement is a loosely-organized political movement of Shiite Islamist, Iraqi nationalists vehemently opposed to foreign intervention in Iraq. The Sadrists are followers of Muqtada al-Sadr, a Shiite cleric, political leader, and son of Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Sadeq al-Sadr. Mohammed Sadeq al-Sadr, as one of Iraq’s preeminent Shiite clerics, became involved in politics by organizing and providing services to poor Shia across Iraq; this organizing formed the basis of the Sadrist movement which remains one of Iraq’s most powerful political movements to this day.[346] Muqtada al-Sadr succeeded his father Mohammed as the leader of the Sadrist movement after the latter’s assassination in 1999.[347] In response to the American invasion of Iraq, Muqtada founded the Mahdi Army in 2003; AAH’s leader, Qais al-Khazali, was a member of the Mahdi Army and a pupil of Mohammed Sadeq al-Sadr before splitting from the group in 2004 and forming AAH two years later.[348] Seeking reconciliation, Sadr called for AAH to rejoin the Mahdi Army after British forces in Iraq arrested the Khazali brothers in 2007; AAH refused.[349]

Although AAH and the Sadrists both honor the legacies of Mohammed Baqir al-Sadr and Mohammed Sadeq al-Sadr, the groups differ ideologically. AAH is a Khomeinist group that expresses overt allegiance to figures of the “tradition of the Iranian Revolution” and espouses the ideology of Wilayat al-Faqih (“Guardianship of the Jurist,” in English; the Islamic Republic of Iran’s state ideology).[350] AAH seeks to displace the Sadrists as the preeminent Shiite social and political organization in Iraq while advancing Iran’s influence within Iraq – both of which the Sadrists opposed.[351] Khazali and Sadr also split on international activity, Khazali supports engagement in Syria and other countries, while Sadr believes his group should only operate within Iraq.[352] AAH fighters often clash with Sadr supporters throughout Iraq.[353]

Relations did not improve between AAH and the Sadrists when AAH entered the Iraqi political process in 2011. Before then, the Sadrists were the primary allies of Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon coalition in Parliament and had a history of tensions with AAH.  Muqtada al-Sadr stated in 2010 that he would not allow AAH to participate in politics because of the group’s history of “murdering Iraqi civilians.”[354]

AAH’s entry into formal politics appeared to tip the balance of power in Parliament away from the Sadrists by creating a new, potentially stronger ally for Maliki/Dawlat al-Qanoon.[355] Meanwhile their military competition continued. This competition eventually led AAH to launch an assassination campaign against Sadrist political leaders in 2012, in order to weaken the Sadrist’s standing prior to the 2013 regional elections. Although the groups joined to fight the Islamic State, relations improved very little during this period. For instance, in 2014, Sadr wrote off AAH as little more than a Maliki-sponsored militia and accused it of carrying out purges of anti-Maliki Sunni tribesmen in southern Iraq. AAH responded by attacking Sadrists in the Shia-majority neighborhoods surrounding Baghdad.[356] Tensions continued throughout Iraq’s mass protests in 2019. Sadr supported the protesters, while AAH helped security forces repress the demonstrations. Notably, on October 26, 2019, AAH militants clashed at first with protesters and later with members of Muqtada al-Sadr’s Saraya al-Salam – a revival of the Sadrists’ Mahdi Army that was founded in 2014 – in the southeastern city of Amarah.[357]

In December 2020, Muqtada al-Sadr announced that he and his Sairoon political alliance intend to campaign in Iraq’s 2021 parliamentary elections with a call to “restore the Shiite home” via the establishment of “moral governance” in Iraq.[358] A spokesman for and leader of AAH’s political wing, al-Sadiqoon, later welcomed Sadr’s statement. The spokesman said that the group considered Sadr’s message “very important” because it promoted an “inclusive national interest” that transcended Iraq’s sectarian divisions in the name of good governance.[359] However, the Fatah coalition sought to form a post-hoc coalition with the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, another major Kurdish party.[360] The statement expressing pleasure with Sadr’s continued participation in Iraqi politics was likely AAH political posturing.

The 2021 elections marked another major split between AAH and Sadr. Sadr dominated the election, winning 73 seats to Nouri al-Maliki’s Dawlat al-Qanoon coalition 33 and the Fatah Alliance’s 17.[361] However, by influencing the Iraqi judiciary, AAH, Maliki, and the IRGC QF prevented Sadr from forming a government,[362] and in June 2022, he instructed his 73 members of parliament to resign.[363] In August, Sadr announced he was stepping back from politics, leading to mass protests throughout Iraq. AAH fighters clashed with protestors loyal to Sadr in Basra; there was fighting in the streets and assaults on the AAH and Saraya al-Salam headquarters.[364] The political turmoil spiked a wave of violence between December 2023 and February 2024, in which approximately 200 people were killed across Iraq.[365] There were also assassination attempts and direct attacks on both groups’ headquarters.[366]

State Sponsors And External Influences

AAH maintains close ties with Iran. Iran played a central role in the creation of AAH and the Special Groups network.[367] AAH is often referred to as one of Iran’s proxy organizations in Iraq and receives significant financial aid and training resources from the IRGC-QF. Iran also influences the group’s goals and activities. Although AAH leader Qais al-Khazali controls the group’s day-to-day operations, commanders of the IRGC-QF have wielded significant influence over AAH’s military and political activities in the past.[368] The IRGC-QF also provides significant financial, technical, and resource-based support to AAH, including supporting its operations in Syria and Iraq against the Islamic State.[369] IRGC-QF officials have also been directly involved in AAH kinetic operations[370] and political activities.[371]

After IRGC-QF commander Qasem Soleimani’s death in January 2020, Iranian-aligned elements of the PMF – AAH included – appeared to shift their military strategies to decrease their operational and strategic reliance upon the IRGC. Observers attributed this development to the apparent inability of the new IRGC-QF commander, Esmail Ghaani, to exert the same degree of personal authority over its Iraqi proxies as his predecessor.[372] Comments made by AAH leader Qais al-Khazali in the months following Soleimani’s death suggested that AAH had embraced this shift in strategy. In November 2020, Ghaani made a highly publicized visit to Baghdad. He called for peace and requested that Iran’s Iraqi proxies refrain from attacking U.S. military and diplomatic installations in Iraq.[373] The following week, Khazali pushed back against Ghaani’s request. Khazali stated that, in his and AAH’s view, “the truce with the Americans has ended [as] its conditions [are] not being met.”[374] Khazali’s response also asserted, “the Americans occupy our country [Iraq], not yours [Iran],” stating that although “there is a convergence of interests between the muqawama [“resistance factions;” a nickname used to distinguish Iran-aligned militias] and Tehran,” this convergence does not “change the fact that the Iraqi resistance has 100% patriotic motives.”[375]  In December 2020, Khazali continued his public disagreement with the IRGC. He released a statement in which he made clear his and AAH’s support for the smaller, allegedly distinct “shadow groups” operating in Iraq that have continued to target U.S. assets against Ghaani’s wishes.[376]

However, beginning in 2022, relations between the IRGC QF and AAH improved, with Khazali and AAH continuing to report to and work with the IRGC QF and Esmail Ghaani. Experts assess that following the elections in 2021 that largely disempowered the Iran proxies, the IRGC QF utilized its influence to effectively save the network of proxies and install a friendly government. Out of this, AAH and Khazali, along with Nouri al-Maliki, were the biggest beneficiaries of the IRGCs efforts.[377] As of 2025, Ghaani regularly travels to Iraq to meet with the Iran proxies, including with Khazali. These meetings often prioritize building unity among the Iran backed groups and allow Ghaani to give the groups orders and instructions.[378] Khazali is also viewed by experts as important to Tehran and Khamenei, given his regular presence in Tehran and prominent positioning at events such as at Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi’s funeral.[379]

Footnotes
Footnotes: 

[1] Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. Web. 30 July 2015.

[2] “Iraqi federal police member killed in clash with Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq in Baghdad.” Shafaq News, March 31, 2024. https://shafaq.com/en/Iraq/Iraqi-federal-police-Clash-with-Asa-ib-Ahl-al....

[3] Jawad al-Tamimi, Aymenn. “Iraq: Who are Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq Islamists.” Islamist Gate, 6 March 2014. Web. 20 July 2015; Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. Web. 30 July 2015; Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. Web. 31 July 2015.

[4] Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. Web. 31 July 2015.

[5] Mansour, Renad. “Networks of Power: The Popular Mobilization Forces and the state in Iraq.” Chatham House, February 25, 2021. 13.

[6] Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. http://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/reports/Asaib%20Ahl%...

[7] Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. http://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/reports/Asaib%20Ahl%...

[8] Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. Web. 30 July 2015; Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. Web. 31 July 2015; “IntelBrief: The United States and Iran Continue Tit-for-Tat Escalation in Iraq.” The Soufan Center, January 8, 2020.

[9] Heras, Nicholas. “Iraqi Shi’a Militia Asa’ib Ahl al Haq Expands Operations to Syria.” The Jamestown Foundation, Terrorism Monitor 12(10), 15 May 2014. Web. 31 July 2015.

[10] Mamouri, Ali. “The Rise of ‘Cleric Militias’ in Iraq.” Al-Monitor (trans. T. Huffman), 23 July 2013. Web. 30 July 2015; Heras, Nicholas. “Iraqi Shi’a Militia Asa’ib Ahl al Haq Expands Operations to Syria.” The Jamestown Foundation, Terrorism Monitor 12(10), 15 May 2014. Web. 31 July 2015.

[11] Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. Web. 30 July 2015.

[12] Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. Web. 31 July 2015. Chulov, Martin. “Cleric freed in move expected to prompt handover of kidnapped Briton's body” The Guardian (London, U.K.), Jan. 3, 2010. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/jan/03/qais-al-khazali-cleric-fre...

[13] Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. Web. 31 July 2015.

[14] Mamouri, Ali. “The Rise of ‘Cleric Militias’ in Iraq.” Al-Monitor (trans. T. Huffman), 23 July 2013. Web. 30 July 2015.

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[254] The Telegram post cited below was published by the official Sabereen News account and should be interpreted as a tacit endorsement from AAH. Report from “Sabereen News – صابرين نيوز” via Telegram, November 17, 2020. https://t.me/sabreenS1/15136.

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[308] “Iraqi federal police member killed in clash with Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq in Baghdad.” Shafaq News, March 31, 2024. https://shafaq.com/en/Iraq/Iraqi-federal-police-Clash-with-Asa-ib-Ahl-al....

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[312] Office of the Spokesperson. “State Department Terrorist Designation of Harakat al-Nujaba (HAN) and Akram ‘Abbas al-Kabi.” U.S. Department of State, March 5, 2019. https://2017-2021.state.gov/state-department-terrorist-designation-of-ha....

[313] U.S. Department of the Treasury. “U.S. Treasury Takes Action to Protect Iraqi Financial System From Abuse.” January 29, 2024. https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy2053

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[316] Jawad al-Tamimi. “Iraq: Who are Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq Islamists.” Islamist Gate, 6 March 2014. Web. 20 July 2015; Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. Web. 30 July 2015; Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. Web. 31 July 2015; Al-Jawoshy, Omar. “ISIS Suicide Bomber in Iraq Kills Dozens at Soccer Game.” New York Times, Mar. 25, 2016. Web. 3 April 2016.

[317] “ Kurdish town hit by quake refuses aid from Iran-backed militia.” Rudaw, November 17, 2017.

[318] Coles, Isabel, Ali Nabhan and Ghassan Adnan. “Iraqi Who Once Killed Americans Is a U.S. Dilemma as He Gains Political Power.” The Wall Street Journal (New York, NY),  Dec. 11, 2018.

[319] "Iraq: End Irresponsible Arms Transfers Fuelling Militia War Crimes." Amnesty International, January 5, 2017. Accessed July 2, 2018. https://www.amnesty.nl/actueel/iraq-end-irresponsible-arms-transfers-fuelling-militia-war-crimes; Human Rights Watch. “Iraq: Pro-Government Militias’ Trail of Death.” Human Rights Watch, July 32, 2014.

[320] Knights, Michael. “Iran’s Expanding Militia Army in Iraq: The New Special Groups.” CTC Sentinel 12(17) (US Military Academy, West Point: August, 2019). 4.

[321] “Government Practices” in 2020 Report on International Religious Freedom: Iraq. U.S. Department of State, May 12, 2021.

[322] “Government Practices” in 2020 Report on International Religious Freedom: Iraq. U.S. Department of State, May 12, 2021.

[323] Mansour, Renad. “Networks of Power: The Popular Mobilization Forces and the state in Iraq.” Chatham House, February 25, 2021. 14-16.

[324] Mansour, Renad, and Faleh A. Jabar. "The Popular Mobilization Forces and Iraq's Future." Carnegie Endowment. April 2017. Accessed July 2, 2018. http://carnegieendowment.org/files/CMEC_63_Mansour_PMF_Final_Web.pdf; Ezzeddine, Nancy, and Erwin Van Ween. "Power in Perspective: CRU Policy Brief Four Key Insights into Iraq’s Al-Hashd Al-Sha’abi." Clingendael. June 2018. Accessed July 2, 2018. https://www.clingendael.org/sites/default/files/2018-06/PB_Power_in_pers....

[325] Harris, Bryant. "Congress Targets Election Winners in Iraq." Al-Monitor, May 30, 2018. Accessed July 2, 2018. https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2018/05/congress-target-winne... Knights, Michael, Hamdi Malik, Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi. “Honored, Not Contained: The Future of Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces.” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, May 23, 2020.

[326] Knights, Michael. “Iran’s Expanding Militia Army in Iraq: The New Special Groups.” CTC Sentinel 12(17) (US Military Academy, West Point: August, 2019). https://ctc.usma.edu/irans-expanding-militia-army-iraq-new-special-groups/. 2.

[327] Knights, Michael, Hamdi Malik, Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi. “Honored, Not Contained: The Future of Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces.” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, May 23, 2020. 4, 28, 33 – 5, 148.

[328] Human Rights Watch. “Iraq: Pro-Government Militias’ Trail of Death.” Human Rights Watch, July 32, 2014.

[329] “Demonstrations in Baghdad and a number of other cities on the occasion of International Quds Day (تظاهرات في بغداد وعدد من المدن بمناسبة يوم القدس العالمي).” Al-Masalah, March 10, 2016.

[330] Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. Web. 30 July 2015; Kirkpatrick, David. “Shiite Militias Pose Challenge for U.S. in Iraq.” 16 Sept. 2014. Web. 31 July 2015; Hashem, Ali. “Iraq’s Shiite forces claim victory over IS.” Al-Monitor, March 16, 2015.

[331] Toumaj, Amir, and Romany Shaker. "Iranian-backed Iraqi Militias Form Coalition Ahead of Parliamentary Elections." Long War Journal, January 25, 2018. Accessed July 2, 2018. https://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2018/01/iranian-backed-iraqi-mil....

[332] Knights, Michael. “The Future of Kata'ib Hezbollah and Iran's Other Proxies in Iraq.” CTC Sentinel 13(10) (US Military Academy, West Point: October 2020). 8.

[333] Truzman, Joe, Bill Roggio. “Network of Iraqi militias claim responsibility for attack in Israel.” Long War Journal, December 28, 2023. https://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2023/12/network-of-iraqi-militia...

[334] Jhaveri, Ashka, Andie Parry, Johanna Moore, Brian Carter, Amin Soltani. “Iran Update, October 18, 2023.” Institute for the Study of War, October 18, 2023. https://understandingwar.org/backgrounder/iran-update-october-18-2023.

[335] Malik, Hamdi. “The Tuna and Noodles Saga: Findings from a War of Words Between Militias.” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, March 3, 2021. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/tuna-and-noodles-sag....

[336] Nevola, Luca, Miran Feyli, Ana Marco. “The Muqawama and its Enemies: Shifting Patterns in Iran-Backed Shiite Militia Activity in Iraq.” ACLED, May 23, 2023. https://acleddata.com/2023/05/23/the-muqawama-and-its-enemies-shifting-p....

[337] Malik, Hamdi, Michael Knights. “Militia Hair-Pulling Over Who Are ‘The Truest Muqawama.’” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, November 26, 2023. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/militia-hair-pulling...

[338] Chulov, Martin. “Controlled by Iran, the deadly militia recruiting Iraq’s men to die in Syria.” The Guardian (London, U.K.), March 12, 2014. Web. July 30, 2015; Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. Web. 30 July 2015.

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[340] "Lebanese PM Slams Visit by Iran-backed Iraqi Militia Chief to Israeli Border." The Times of Israel. December 9, 2017. Accessed July 2, 2018. https://www.timesofisrael.com/lebanese-pm-slams-iran-backed-iraqi-militi....

[341] Malik, Hamdi and Michael Knights. “Hassan Nasrallah's Funeral: Iraqi Militia Response and Attendance.” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, February 27, 2025. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/hassan-nasrallahs-fu...

[342] Knights, Michael, Hamdi Malik. “Update on Houthi Involvement in Iraq.” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, February 26, 2025. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/update-houthi-involv....

[343] Campa, Kelly, Alexandra Braverman, Carolyn Moorman, Katherine Wells, Ria Reddy, Johanna Moore, Victoria Penza, Maryam Sadr, Annika Ganzeveld. “Iran Update, April 1, 2025.” Institute for the Study of War, April 1, 2025. https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/iran-update-april-1-2025

[344] Campa, Kelly, Andie Parry, Ria Reddy, Katherine Wells, Ben Rezaei, Ben Schmida, Carolyn Moorman, Brian Carter. “Iran Update, May 5, 2025.” Institute for the Study of War, May 5, 2025. https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/iran-update-may-5-2025

[345] Rubin, Alissa J. “Once Considered Foes, Iranian-Backed Groups Get a Warm Welcome From Iraq.” The New York Times, Sept. 15, 2024. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/15/world/middleeast/iran-iraq-hamas-hout....

[346] Cochrane, Marisa. “Iraq Report 12: The Fragmentation of the Sadrist Movement.” Institute for the Study of War, 2009. 9.

[347] D'Cruz, Benedict Robin and Renad Mansour. “Making Sense of the Sadrists: Fragmentation and Unstable Politics” in Iraq in Transition: Competing Actors and Complicated Politics. Foreign Policy Research Institute, December 2020. 8-10.

[348] Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. 9; D'Cruz, Benedict Robin and Renad Mansour. “Making Sense of the Sadrists: Fragmentation and Unstable Politics” in Iraq in Transition: Competing Actors and Complicated Politics. Foreign Policy Research Institute, December 2020. 21.

[349] Cochrane, Marisa. “Iraq Report 12: The Fragmentation of the Sadrist Movement.” Institute for the Study of War, 2009. 40.

[350] Jawad al-Tamimi, Aymenn. “Iraq: Who are Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq Islamists?” Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, March 6, 2014; Cochrane, Marisa. “Iraq Report 12: The Fragmentation of the Sadrist Movement.” Institute for the Study of War, 2009. 19, 40, 41; Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. 9; Nader, Alireza. “Iran's Role in Iraq:

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[351] Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. 9-10.

[352] Rudolph, Inna. “All the Mahdi’s Men: Contextualising Nuances Within Iraq’s Islamic Resistance.” Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, September 2024. 1-27 doi:10.1080/1057610X.2024.2398678.

[353] Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. 16, 22; Al-Rubaie, Azhar, Alex MacDonald. “Iraq: Four killed in Basra clashes between Sadr and Iran-backed groups.” Middle East Eye, September 1, 2022. https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/iraq-iran-backed-asaib-ahl-haq-closes-offices-basra-violence; Foltyn, Simone. “‘Who will protect us?’: Baghdad residents wait out fighting as city grinds to halt.” The Guardian, August 30, 2022. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/aug/30/iraq-baghdad-residents-wai....

[354] “Sadr accuses League of the Righteous of seeking to overthrow his power,” Radio Sawa December 17, 2010.

[355] “Asa’ib raises cover in Iraq (العصائب تثير لغطا بالعراق).” Al Jazeera, July 1, 2012; Jawad al-Tamimi, Aymenn. “Iraq: Who are Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq Islamists?” Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, March 6, 2014; Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. 23; Nader, Alireza. “Iran's Role in Iraq: Room for Cooperation?” RAND Corporation, 2015. 10.

[356] Heras, Nicholas. “Iraqi Shi’a Militia Asa’ib Ahl al Haq Expands Operations to Syria.” The Jamestown Foundation, Terrorism Monitor 12(10), 15 May 2014. Web. 31 July 2015.

[357] “After night clashes between militias, Baghdad sends security reinforcements to northern Iraq (بعد اشتباكات ليلية بين ميليشيات...بغداد ترسل تعزيزات أمنية لجنوب العراق) Al-Hurra, October 26, 2019; Mansour, Renad. “Networks of Power: The Popular Mobilization Forces and the state in Iraq.” Chatham House, February 25, 2021. 14.

[358] Statement from Muqtada al-Sadr (@Mu_AlSadr) via Twitter, December 2, 2020. https://twitter.com/Mu_AlSadr/status/1334164641518395393/photo/1

[359] “Asa’ib welcomes al-Sadr’s call to restore the Shiite home: ‘let us take advantage of this opportunity and not waste it.’”(العصائب ترحب بدعوة الصدر لترميم البيت الشيعي: لنستثمر الفرصة ولا نضيعها). NAS News, December 6, 2020; Statement from Naeem al-Aboudi (@Drnaeemyasir) via Twitter, December 6, 2020. https://twitter.com/Drnaeemyasir/status/1335602388292542465

[360] “Kurdistan’s PUK forges alliance with pro-Iran factions in Iraq ahead of election.” The Arab Weekly, June 6, 2021; Alshamary, Marsin. “Iraq’s upcoming elections: Voters and likely winners.” Brookings Institution, June 24, 2021.

[361] Yuan, Shawn. “Iraq announces final results of October parliament election.” Al Jazeera, November 30, 2021; Abdul-Zahra, Qassim. “Iraq’s militias seek to consolidate political power in vote.” Associated Press, October 5, 2021. https://apnews.com/article/hezbollah-baghdad-iran-middle-east-iraq-c30340c8ce4e98be2cf652e9abc18470; “Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Counter Extremism Project, Accessed May 25, 2025. https://www.counterextremism.com/threat/asaib-ahl-al-haq.

[362] Knights, Michael. “Iraq’s Two Coups—And How the U.S. Should Respond.” Fikra Forum, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, August 2, 2022. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/iraqs-two-coups-and-....

[363] “Iraqi MPs from Muqtada al-Sadr’s bloc resign.” Al Jazeera, June 12, 2022. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/6/12/iraqi-mps-from-firebrand-cleric...

[364] Al-Rubaie, Azhar, Alex MacDonald. “Iraq: Four killed in Basra clashes between Sadr and Iran-backed groups.” Middle East Eye, September 1, 2022. https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/iraq-iran-backed-asaib-ahl-haq-closes....

[365] “Iraqi Security at Risk: the conflict between Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq and Saraya Al-Salam.” Shafaq News. February 2, 2022. https://shafaq.com/en/Report/Iraqi-Security-at-Risk-the-conflict-between...

[366] Ganzeveld, Annika, Andie Parry, Johanna Moore, Amin Soltani, Kathryn Tyson, Nicholas Carl. “Iran Update, February 20, 2024.” Institute for the Study of War, February 20, 2024. https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/iran-update-february-20-2024; Ganzeveld, Annika, Andie Parry, Alexandra Braverman, and Brian Carter. “Iran Update, February 5, 2024.” Institute for the Study of War, February 5, 2024. https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/iran-update-february-5-2024; Mehvar, Ameneh, Sherwan Hindreen Ali, Matti Suomenaro, Khaled Daoud. “Regional Overview Middle East February 2024.” ACLED, March 8, 2024. https://acleddata.com/2024/03/08/regional-overview-middle-east-february-....

[367] Cochrane, Marisa. “Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Khazali Special Groups Network.” Institute for the Study of War, 13 Jan. 2008. Web. 31 July 2015.

[368] Wyer, Sam. “The Resurgence of Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq.” Middle East Security Report 7, Institute for the Study of War, December 2012. Web. 30 July 2015; Heras, Nicholas. “Iraqi Shi’a Militia Asa’ib Ahl al Haq Expands Operations to Syria.” The Jamestown Foundation, Terrorism Monitor 12(10), 15 May 2014. Web. 31 July 2015.

[369] “Iran’s Networks of Influence in the Middle East.” The International Institute for Strategic Studies, 2019, Chapter Two, Chapter, Three, Chapter Four..

[370] Knights, Michael, Crispin Smith. “Direct-Operated IRGC-QF Attack Cells in Iraq: Data Related to the Troell Case.” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, February 19, 2024. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/direct-operated-irgc...

[371] Knights, Michael. “Iraq’s Two Coups—And How the U.S. Should Respond.” Fikra Forum, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, August 2, 2022. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/iraqs-two-coups-and-....

[372] Fazeli, Yaghoub and Emily Judd. “Iran’s new Quds Force commander Esmail Ghaani ‘not another Solemani’: Expert.” Al Arabiya English, May 20, 2020.

[373] Abdul-Zahra, Qassim and Samya Kullab. “Iran’s allies on high alert in Trump’s final weeks in office.” The Associated Press, November 20, 2020.

[374] Loveluck, Louisa, and Mustafa Salim. “Iraq fears Trump’s final weeks could see confrontation between U.S. and Iran.” The Washington Post, Nov. 27, 2020; Khazali: the armistice with the Americans has ended...and the Turkish threat to northern Iraq is dangerous (الخزعلي: الهدنة مع الأميركيين انتهت.. والتهديد التركي شمال العراق خطير) Al-Mayadeen News, November 19, 2020.

[375] “Khazali: the armistice with the Americans has ended...and the Turkish threat to northern Iraq is dangerous (الخزعلي: الهدنة مع الأميركيين انتهت.. والتهديد التركي شمال العراق خطير) Al-Mayadeen News, November 19, 2020.

[376] Lee Weiss, Jacob. “Iran’s Resistance Axis Rattled by Divisions: Asaib Ahl al-Haq’s Leader Rejects the Ceasefire in Iraq.” The Jamestown Foundation, February 12, 2021.

[377] Knights, Michael, Hamdi Malik, Crispin Smith. “Iraq’s New Regime Change: how Tehran-Backed Terrorist Organizations and Militias Captured the Iraqi State.” CTC Sentinel 16(11) (US Military Academy, West Point: December, 2023). 2.

[378] Campa, Kelly, Annika Ganzeveld, Kathryn Tyson, Ben Rezaei, Ria Reddy, Alexandra Braverman, Katherine Wells, Andie Parry, Siddhant Kishore, Brian Carter. “Iran Update, September 18, 2024.” Institute for the Study of War, Sept. 18, 2024. https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/iran-update-september-18-2024; Moorman, Carolyn, Andie Parry, Katherine Wells, Alexandra Braverman, Ben Rezaei, Avery Borens, Ria Reddy, Alexis Thomas, Brian Carter. “Iran Update, May 16, 2025.” Instute for the Study of War, May 18, 2025. https://understandingwar.org/backgrounder/iran-update-may-16-2025.

[379] Malik, Hamdi, Michael Knights. “Qais in Tehran, Prominently Seated Behind Khamenei.” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, October 7, 2024. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/qais-tehran-prominently-seated-behind-khamenei

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