http://www.jamestown.org
 
Al-Qaeda Uses Jaish al-Mahdi to Gain Control over Helmand Province

A movement called Jaish al-Mahdi (The Army of the Mahdi) has emerged in
Afghanistan. The leader of Afghanistan's Jaish al-Mahdi is Abu Haris, an
Arab commander who fought during the anti-Soviet jihad in eastern
Afghanistan (Weesa, September 19). Afghanistan's newly established Jaish
al-Mahdi is a combination of Arab and Afghan fighters. In a statement, the
movement noted that at its outset Jaish al-Mahdi enjoyed the support of 250
Arab and Afghan fighters, although it is still ambiguous as to which jihadi
party these fighters were involved in during the Afghan wars. Today, the
group has been attempting to recruit Afghan youth to help undertake
operations and participate in what Abu Haris calls the "jihad in
Afghanistan" (Pajhwak Afghan News, August 16).

The army's self-proclaimed leader, Abu Haris, is an Arab fighter who was on
the side of the resistance against the Soviets in Paktia province. He is
allegedly Syrian, and for many years has been active in different parts of
Afghanistan (Pajhwak Afghan News, August 16). A high-ranking Taliban
official, who declined to be named, said that those gathered under the
leadership of Abu Haris are all close friends (Pajhwak Afghan News, August
16). Some al-Qaeda personnel speaking to Pajhwak Afghan News acknowledged
the formation of Jaish al-Mahdi and denied any differences between the group
and al-Qaeda, claiming that they cooperated with each other fully.

The desolate and largely lawless region of Helmand province, the former main
base of al-Qaeda in the Afghan-Pakistani border's Paktia province, and the
Pakistani territory of Waziristan are the areas that the Jaish al-Mahdi
leader claimed as the fields of jihad against NATO-led forces and the Afghan
government (Weesa, September 19). Of the areas that Jaish al-Mahdi has
announced as their battlefields, Helmand province is the only place where
Arab personnel of al-Qaeda have not held sway. Therefore, Jaish al-Mahdi's
Arab fighters' activities in Helmand would indicate an attempt to insert
Arab insurgents into an area that has not traditionally been one of their
strongholds. Nevertheless, since the surge of violence in 2004, al-Qaeda
elements have been active under Mustafa Abu al-Yazid throughout the country,
and in Kunar province some Arab fighters are operating under the supervision
of Abu Ikhlas al-Misri.

It is also unique that the group, which is believed to be Sunni, chose the
name "Jaish al-Mahdi," as the "Mahdi" is more prominent in Shiism. However,
it is unlikely that this would be a Shiite group operating in concert with
al-Qaeda and in that region of Afghanistan. Additionally, the idea of the
Mahdi does fit into Sunni religious thought.

Waliullah Rahmani is a freelance journalist in Afghanistan.



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