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12Mar15


Shiite Afghan casualties of the war in Syria


The civil war in Syria risks exacerbating the sectarian and ethnic conflicts in geographically distant Afghanistan and Pakistan. The deaths of 62 Shiite Afghan nationals killed in combat in Syria since September 2013 testifies to that threat: there is every reason to expect surviving Shiite Afghan veterans of the civil war in Syria to relocate to Afghanistan and Pakistan to fight Sunni groups, including the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban, some of whose members also are present in Syria.

The 62 individuals were identified through a survey of Iranian media coverage of the funerals of Shiite Afghan nationals killed in combat in Syria. They were all members of the Fatemiyoun Brigade, which, according to the Islamic Republic media was "established in Kabul by Afghan Shiites." However, all individuals analyzed were buried in different cities in Iran, their families were present in the funeral processions, and the photos clearly indicate that the "martyrs" were well known figures in the cities where the processions took place. This suggests Fatemiyoun Brigade combatants were recruited among Afghan refugees in Iran rather than in Kabul, Afghanistan. The presence of Martyr Foundation [Bonyad-e Shahid] representatives at the funeral services and compensation of the families by Islamic Republic authorities provide additional proof of official recruitment of the Afghan combatants.

In "Moalem," [The Teacher] a propaganda movie glorifying the role of the Fatemiyoun Brigade, the anonymous narrator describes the desire among the Shiite Afghans to defend Shiite pilgrimage sites around Damascus and fight radical Sunnis, including the Afghan Taliban, as the primary motive behind their presence in Syria. However, a photo of the late Fatemiyoun Brigade chief commander Ali-Reza Tavasoli, also known as Yasini and Abu Hamed, with Major General Qassem Soleimani, chief commander of the extraterritorial operations Qods Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC QF), indicates the Fatemiyoun Brigade is a unit within the organizational structure of the Qods Force. The presence of Brigadier General Esmaeil Qaani, Qods Force's second-in-command, at the funeral services of some of the Afghan martyrs provides further evidence of the connection. The Fatemiyoun Brigade must therefore be seen as a small part of the IRGC QF's operations against Tehran's regional adversaries.

The deceased Tavasoli and his deputy, the late Reza Bakhshi, also known as Fateh - the only individuals in the study whose ranks are known - were both Afghans, and the IRGC does not seem to have imposed Iranian commanders upon the Afghans in the field.

Afghan nationals also seem to be fighting separately from Qods Force units. As shown in chart 1, the Fatemiyoun Brigade suffered the largest casualties in the course of four distinct operations: May/June 2014, October 2014, December 2014 and March 2015. A yet unfinished study by this author comparing the dates of death of Shiite Afghan nationals with those of Iranian and Lebanese nationals killed in Syria tentatively concludes that each nationality suffered losses at a different time. This may be due to the Qods Force's attempts at compartmentalization along national and language barriers.

Very little information is available about the specific operations in which the Fatemiyoun Brigade engages, but according to one source, the unit suffered significant casualties during the Syrian military's initial takeover and later withdrawal from Dokhaniyeh, east of Damascus, in October 2014. The same source also reports a Fatemiyoun Brigade engagement during an unsuccessful Syrian Army offensive against Aleppo, which possibly took place in February 2015.

Syria's sectarian conflict has rekindled old tensions between Islam's two largest denominations and has further destabilized the Middle East since the Arab Spring. Its spillover effects have already thrust Iraq and Lebanon to the edge of new civil wars. Qods Force's recruitment of Afghan refugees in it's sectarian conflict against regional Sunni governments will likely exacerbate existing ethnic and sectarian conflicts in Afghanistan and Pakistan. With the departure of the international military presence, Afghanistan too may become a proxy battlefield between Shiite Iran and a Sunni coalition of Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, the Taliban, and affiliated salafist jihadist groups.

Ali Alfoneh is a senior fellow at Foundation for Defense of Democracies. The author thanks Mr. Ahmad Majidyar for valuable comments.

[Source: By Ali Alfoneh, The Long War Journal, NJ, 12Mar15]

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