The US Justice Department has seized control of the website of Al Ghadeer TV channel run by one of Iraq’s most powerful political parties, the Badr Organisation.
The Iran-linked Badr Organisation leads the Fatah Coalition, which has around 50 seats in Parliament’s highly fractured 329-member Council of Representatives.
Badr Organisation has co-existed uneasily with the US in Iraq since 2003, but the US Justice Department’s move could represent a symbolic parting of ways between the US and the Iran-backed group.
Arguably the first Iraqi militia organisation to receive Iranian support, Badr Organisation had previously tried to accommodate the US presence in Iraq, while covertly facilitating arms and money transfers to other Iraqi militia organisations that were attacking US forces.
“The targeting of the Al Ghadeer website, among others, is the first time the United States has recognised the expansion of Iran-backed media activities in the region,” says Hamdi Malik, a London-based expert on Shiite militancy.
Badr Organisation and its head, Hadi Al Amiri, a veteran politician and former militia commander during the Iran-Iraq war – who fought for Tehran – have not been designated by US sanctions.
During what was arguably the peak of US-Iraq relations, Mr Al Amiri visited the White House during the administration of president Barack Obama.
As US-Iran relations deteriorated sharply under President Donald Trump, Washington’s dragnet of sanctions has encroached on the group’s allies, many of whom are militia groups which have attached themselves to Iraq’s official armed forces. These militias, including Badr Organisation allies, are known as the Popular Mobilisation Forces and most are backed by Iran.
Following the November 4 seizure of 29 websites by the US Justice Department – all of them linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – the blocking of Al Ghadeer website represents a tacit US acknowledgement that Badr Organisation is directly linked to the Iranian regime.
For years, Badr Organisation gained increasing control over many Iraqi government ministries, allegedly skimming funds from reconstruction projects and filling police units with loyalists. The latter have been accused of many human rights violations, originally kidnapping, torturing and killing Sunnis suspected of ties to the Baath party of former dictator Saddam Hussein, and later targeting Shiite protesters.
Despite this, their influence over the Iraqi police and the chaos in Iraq after 2003 forced the US-led Coalition into an uneasy alliance with the organisation, which continued during the war against ISIS.
According to Mr Malik, the seizure of Al Ghadeer website may represent one of the final moves of Mr Trump’s campaign against Iran in the region.
“Sanctioning the Badr Organisation is something other administrations have contemplated, but never followed through with,” said Mr Malik.
“Whether the Biden administration wants to escalate against Badr or see it as a more moderate group which could mitigate more radical groups, remains to be seen.”
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Director: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal
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A new relationship with the old country
Treaty of Friendship between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the United Arab Emirates
The United kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the United Arab Emirates; Considering that the United Arab Emirates has assumed full responsibility as a sovereign and independent State; Determined that the long-standing and traditional relations of close friendship and cooperation between their peoples shall continue; Desiring to give expression to this intention in the form of a Treaty Friendship; Have agreed as follows:
ARTICLE 1 The relations between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the United Arab Emirates shall be governed by a spirit of close friendship. In recognition of this, the Contracting Parties, conscious of their common interest in the peace and stability of the region, shall: (a) consult together on matters of mutual concern in time of need; (b) settle all their disputes by peaceful means in conformity with the provisions of the Charter of the United Nations.
ARTICLE 2 The Contracting Parties shall encourage education, scientific and cultural cooperation between the two States in accordance with arrangements to be agreed. Such arrangements shall cover among other things: (a) the promotion of mutual understanding of their respective cultures, civilisations and languages, the promotion of contacts among professional bodies, universities and cultural institutions; (c) the encouragement of technical, scientific and cultural exchanges.
ARTICLE 3 The Contracting Parties shall maintain the close relationship already existing between them in the field of trade and commerce. Representatives of the Contracting Parties shall meet from time to time to consider means by which such relations can be further developed and strengthened, including the possibility of concluding treaties or agreements on matters of mutual concern.
ARTICLE 4 This Treaty shall enter into force on today’s date and shall remain in force for a period of ten years. Unless twelve months before the expiry of the said period of ten years either Contracting Party shall have given notice to the other of its intention to terminate the Treaty, this Treaty shall remain in force thereafter until the expiry of twelve months from the date on which notice of such intention is given.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned have signed this Treaty.
DONE in duplicate at Dubai the second day of December 1971AD, corresponding to the fifteenth day of Shawwal 1391H, in the English and Arabic languages, both texts being equally authoritative.
Signed
Geoffrey Arthur Sheikh Zayed
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