Fox News
 
June 13, 2014
 
As jihadists take aim at Baghdad, Iran steps in to help  historical foe
 
 
By _Lisa Daftari_ (http://www.foxnews.com/archive/lisa-daftari) 


 
 
Iran is coming to the aid of its historic nemesis, sending elite fighters 
to  Iraq in the wake of a Sunni insurgency that has claimed two key northern 
cities  and now threatens Baghdad, Fox News has learned. 
Some 150 fighters from the Revolutionary Guards elite Quds force have 
already  been dispatched by Tehran, and the division's powerful commander, 
Qassem 
 Suleimani, met with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki Thursday and 
pledged to  send two notorious Iranian brigades to aid in the defense of 
Baghdad. That could  amount to as many as 10,000 soldiers sent to fight the 
Sunni 
group known as  Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS). 
 
 



Maliki is believed to be considering the offer, especially in light of  
reported decisions by the U.S. to reject his request for American airstrikes  
against the Al Qaeda-affiliated militants who have recently overrun Mosul and 
 Tikrit and appear to be preparing for a march on the capital. The two 
brigades  that Suleimani offered are Asaab Ahel Haq, a Shi’ite paramilitary 
unit, and the  Shi’ite insurgency group Kata'ib Hezbollah. 
After U.S.-trained security forces dropped their weapons and fled their 
posts  in Mosul, the regime in Baghdad has reason to fear for its survival, an  
intelligence official said. 
“Baghdad is going to be overrun," he said. "The Green Zone is going  down.”
 
Although Iran and Iraq were at war in the 1980s, both the Maliki regime and 
 the rulers in Tehran are Shi'ite, and Iran does not want a fanatical 
jihadist  takeover of its neighbor. Iran has positioned troops along its border 
with Iraq  and has threatened to bomb opposition forces if they come within 
about 60 miles  of Iran’s border, according to an Iranian army general. 
News about the fall of these two cities, which caused about 500,000 to 
flee,  worried Iran. Mosul is in the western Iraqi province of the 
Biblically-mentioned  Nineveh, which shares a 300-mile border with Syria, where 
the 
Iranian government  has been pulling the political and financial puppet strings 
to keep President  Bashar al-Assad in power against the opposing rebels and 
militants. 
In addition to protecting the strategic border to Syria, Iran’s government  
has interests in safeguarding holy shrines and sites in Najaf and Karbala,  
significant to the Shiite Islamic religion. Many Iranians make pilgrimage  
to these sites every year.   
Predominantly Shiite Muslim Iran will combat the "violence and terrorism" 
of  Sunni extremists who have launched an anti-government offensive in 
neighboring  Iraq, Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani warned on Thursday. 
“This is an extremist, terrorist group that is acting savagely," Rouhani 
said  live on state television. 
If Iraq's pleas for support are rebuffed by the U.S., it may have no choice 
 but to turn to Iran, said experts. 
“My sources tell me Maliki believes he is in a desperate situation and 
wants  and needs our support," said retired four-star Gen. Jack Keane, former 
vice  chief of staff of the U.S. Army. "If he doesn't get it in a way that 
will help  him, he will certainly turn to Iran.” 
Iran has more to offer than just the region's most powerful army, Keane 
said.  Tehran could support Maliki with intelligence and advisors, too. 
ISIS, a Sunni Islamic jihadi group, which is an offshoot of Al Qaeda, has  
gained control of geopolitically vital cities in both Syria and Iraq over 
the  last year. It considers Shi'ite Muslims heretics that must be killed at 
the  sword. Its goal is to cleanse Iraq from its Shiite influences. 
ISIS spokesman Abu Muhammad Al-Adnani said in an audio released by  
intelligence sources that the group is planning to march toward Baghdad and  
other 
pivotal cities, including Karbala and Najaf. 
"March to Baghdad al-Rashid, the Baghdad of the Caliphate. We have a score 
to  settle...Be certain of the victory of Allah as long as you fear Him," 
Al-Adnani  said in the recording. 
As ISIS forces have stormed their way across northern Iraq, they have put  
into effect Sharia law on the citizens of Nineveh province, circulating a  
document on social media warning local leaders and religious sheikhs not to  “
work with (the Iraqi) government and be traitors.” The document also 
prohibits  women from leaving the house unless absolutely necessary and for 
women 
to “dress  decently and wear wide clothes.” 
The document also bans drugs, alcohol, cigarettes in public and the  
possession of guns and non- ISIS flags. 
ISIS terrorists in Iraq are allegedly made up of Tunisians and Yemenis, 
along  with other “international fighters,” according to one Iraqi witness.  
As the militants went from Mosul to Tikrit, they seized oil fields in  
Salahuddin province and looted the central bank and collected $420 million. 
They 
 also took 48 Turkish citizens hostage as they seized the Turkish consulate 
in  Mosul, which could bring another regional power down on them. Many eyes 
are on  Turkey, a NATO ally, that has shown interest in northern Iraq for 
some time now  for economic reasons and to support Iraq’s marginalized 
Kurdish minority. 
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey held an emergency briefing 
with  high ranking security officials and the Turkish foreign minister, Ahmet  
Davutoglu, who said, “No one should try to test the limits of Turkey’s  
strength.”

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