logo
US legislators call for action against Iraq's Iran-linked paramilitary groups

US legislators call for action against Iraq's Iran-linked paramilitary groups

The National08-02-2025
Ten Republican members of the US House of Representatives have demanded that Washington designate several Iraqi paramilitary groups with ties to Iran as terrorist organisations and suspend security assistance to Baghdad over its recognition of these groups as part of the state's security forces.
The demand was made in a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and National Security Adviser Mark Waltz dated January 28, and was posted on X by one of its signatories, Representative Joe Wilson.
The letter calls for the designation of several groups that are part of the Popular Mobilisation Forces, which was made a branch of the Iraqi state's security forces after helping to defeat ISIS and end the extremists group's occupation of northern and western Iraq between 2014 and 2017.
Mr Wilson, former chairman of the Middle East House subcommittee, has also written to foreign affairs committee chairman Brian Mast to call for an investigation into former White House adviser Brett McGurk over 'failed' Middle East policies that "endangered US national security".
Both letters cite part of a 2022 report by the Department of Defence Inspector General that highlights the influence of the powerful PMF-linked Badr Organisation in Iraq's ministries of defence and interior and units of its army.
They also point out Iraqi National Security Adviser Qasim Al Araji 's links to the group and his previous detention by the US in connection with attacks on American forces in Iraq in the aftermath of the US-led 2003 invasion.
The letter to Mr Rubio and Mr Waltz calls for terrorist designations for the Badr Organisation as well as the Abu Fadl Al Abbas Brigades; the Fatemiyoun Brigade; Harakat Hezbollah Al Nujaba; Kataeb Al Imam Ali; Kataeb Jund Al Imam; Kataeb Sayyed Al Shuhada; Saraya Al Jihad; Saraya Khorasani; and the Zainabiyoun Brigades.
It also calls for terrorism-related sanctions on the Badr Organisation, Abu Fadl Al Abbas Brigades, Kataeb Al Imam Ali, Kataeb Jund Al Imam, Saraya Al Jihad and Saraya Khorasani.
The House representatives said they wanted all US security assistance to Iraq to be suspended "as long as any Iranian-backed militia or foreign terrorist organisation are legally part of the Iraqi state or funded or trained by the government of Iraq".
While the US withdrew its forces from Iraq by 2011, they later returned as part of the international coalition against ISIS and remain in the country alongside other foreign troops to train and assist Iraqi forces in preventing a resurgence of the extremist group.
Iraqi military bases hosting US troops have faced repeated unclaimed attacks with mortars, rockets or drones amid demands for their withdrawal from Iran-allied factions. The attacks increased after the Gaza war began in October 2023 but subsided under a truce agreed to give Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani's government time to negotiate a US troop pullout with Washington.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gold futures spike to record as Trump tariffs blindside 'trusted' market
Gold futures spike to record as Trump tariffs blindside 'trusted' market

The National

time17 minutes ago

  • The National

Gold futures spike to record as Trump tariffs blindside 'trusted' market

Gold futures hit another record on Friday, reinforcing its safe-haven appeal at a time of market uncertainty over US President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs and his surprise move to tax bullion. December futures for the precious metal spiked to $3,534.10 an ounce in intraday trading. It trimmed gains to settle at $3,398.58, a 1 per cent weekly gain. That puts gold's gains at about 30 per cent in 2025 and nearly 40 per cent from 12 months ago. 'Tariffs on gold bars? It's absurd. We're talking about a market that's supposed to be one of the cleanest, most efficient and most trusted in global finance,' said Nigel Green, chief executive of global financial advisory deVere Group. 'Instead, we now have price distortions, logistical headaches, and an open invitation for arbitrage – all created by a piece of paper.' Blindsided: What's driving gold up? That sharp shift in gold, alongside other key metals silver, platinum and copper, are being driven by US tariff expectations and tariff-related hedging activity in futures, said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Danish lender Saxo Bank. 'We saw similar dislocations during Covid, when the transatlantic bullion supply chain briefly stalled, and again earlier this year amid speculation that Trump's tariffs might include precious metals,' he said. 'For now, it's worth watching whether another 'Taco moment' will emerge. If not, the spread may need to settle at a new level that reflects the tariff landscape,' he added, referring to the 'Trump Always Chickens Out' market description of the President flip-flopping on his decisions. But the biggest blow to gold was, as first reported by the Financial Times, Washington's decision to impose duties on 1kg and 1oz bars – a category long assumed to be exempt from trade levies and despite the White House indicating in April, when Mr Trump announced his so-called Liberation Day tariffs, that gold would be spared from the sweeping duties. Crucially, 1kg bars comprise Switzerland's biggest exports of gold to the world's largest economy. The sudden ruling 'detonated decades of convention, setting the stage for a seismic redrawing of global gold flows', Mr Green said. In particular, the decision landed a huge blow on Switzerland, the world's largest exporter of refined gold, and which is already facing a 39 per cent duty on other US imports. 'We believe gold trade flows should be excluded from the current account balance, as they occasionally greatly distort the underlying fundamental dynamics for technical reasons, unrelated to the economic relations between the US and Switzerland,' said Kiran Kowshik and Filippo Pallotti, analysts at Swiss bank Lombard Odier. Also, it created a dramatic pricing split, as while London spot prices remained steady, US futures jumped, commanding a premium of more than $100 an ounce. That gap is also straining the role of New York's Comex – the world's largest futures exchange – as the global hedging benchmark, threatening to divert trade away from the US, with London emerging as a possible beneficiary, Mr Green said. 'Futures surging into uncharted territory because one customs ruling turned the global gold plumbing upside down. This is what happens when political theatre trumps market logic,' he added. Where is gold headed? In addition to the tariffs, persistent central bank demand, geopolitical tension, sanctions, trade friction and further US dollar weakness are expected to continue supporting gold prices in the second half of the year, analysts have said. Before Friday's spike, multiple research, including from the World Gold Council, Citi Research, Refinitiv and Byblos Research, have pegged gold to average $3,400 in the third quarter of 2025. Strong central bank buying of 900 tonnes in 2025 and robust ETF inflows of 552 tonnes in the first quarter of 2025 reflect sustained demand for gold, while a softer US dollar and anticipated Federal Reserve rate cuts enhance the precious metal's attractiveness as an inflation hedge, according to Aaron Hill, chief analyst at forex trading broker FP Market. Stock market reaction Global stock markets were mixed at the close on Friday, with Wall Street clinching a third winning week in a row after days of uncertain trade, amid higher technology shares and investor optimism on interest rate cuts. Apple, which Mr Trump on Wednesday said would invest an additional $100 billion into US manufacturing, jumped 4.2 per cent on Friday for a 13.3 per cent weekly gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average settled 0.47 per cent higher, the S&P 500 added 0.78 per cent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose 0.98 per cent for its 18th record closing high in 2025. In Europe, London's FTSE 100 was nearly flat on investor concern over the Bank of England's split rate decision, although strong corporate earnings softened the blow. Paris' CAC 40 added 0.4 per cent, while Frankfurt's DAX inched down 0.1 per cent. Earlier in Asia, Tokyo's Nikkei 225 closed 1.9 per cent higher after a Japanese government official said the White House would make revisions to its stacked tariffs on the world's fourth-biggest economy. The US and Japan struck a tariff deal on July 22, which Mr Trump touted as 'the largest trade deal in history ', although Tokyo did not endorse it at the time. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index settled 0.9 per cent lower, while the Shanghai Composite inched down 0.1 per cent. The US and China are in discussions to extend their 90-day truce over tariff issues. Oil prices, meanwhile, recorded a sharp weekly loss on Friday amid the latest round of US tariffs and anticipated US-Russia talks on a Ukraine war ceasefire. Brent settled 0.24 per cent higher at $66.59 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate was flat at $63.88 a barrel, dragging them to weekly losses of 4.4 per cent and more than 5 per cent, respectively. Both benchmarks are now down nearly 11 per cent in 2025.

Best person
Best person

Gulf Today

time2 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

Best person

Donald Trump has announced that he will meet his friend/enemy Vladimir Putin and then Volodymyr Zelensky will be joining them for a three-way talk, hopefully in the same room rather than via Zoom or its equivalent. Although one can't be certain of how leaders regard each other, a number of people suggest that Putin sees Trump as a 'useful fool' and it's unlikely that he will be happy with Zelensky. If most people saw an elderly grandfather wandering around the roof of their home without any obvious purpose they would call for medical support and consider if they needed to be put into care and yet Donald Trump has done this and is now trying to stop a war. If it must be an American to negotiate this, then why not Pope Leo XIV? I am sure that Trump, a Bible carrying and selling Christian, would have faith in him. Dennis Fitzgerald Melbourne, Australia

Trump announces peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia
Trump announces peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia

Al Etihad

time2 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

Trump announces peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia

9 Aug 2025 08:48 WASHINGTON (REUTERS)Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a US-brokered peace agreement on Friday during a meeting with US President Donald Trump that would boost bilateral economic ties after decades of conflict, and move them toward a full normalisation of their deal between the South Caucasus rivals is being viewed as a significant accomplishment for the Trump administration."It's a long time - 35 years - they fought and now they're friends, and they're going to be friends for a long time," Trump said at a signing ceremony at the White House, where he was flanked by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol and Azerbaijan have been at odds since the late 1980s when Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous Azerbaijani region mostly populated by ethnic Armenians, broke away from Azerbaijan with support from Armenia. Azerbaijan took back full control of the region in 2023, prompting almost all of the territory's 100,000 ethnic Armenians to flee to said the two countries had committed to stop fighting, open up diplomatic relations and respect each other's territorial agreement includes exclusive US development rights to a strategic transit corridor through the South Caucasus that the White House said would facilitate greater exports of energy and other said the United States signed separate deals with each country to expand cooperation on energy, trade and technology, including artificial intelligence. Details were not said restrictions had also been lifted on defense cooperation between Azerbaijan and the leaders praised Trump for helping to end the conflict and said they would nominate him for the Nobel Peace has tried to present himself as a global peacemaker in the first months of his second term. The White House credits him with brokering a ceasefire between Cambodia and Thailand, and sealing peace deals between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Pakistan and India. However, Trump has not managed to end Russia's 3-1/2-year-old war in Ukraine or Israel's conflict with Hamas in Gaza. Trump on Friday said he would meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on August 15 to work on ending the war.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store