By The Washington Institute
Michael Knights
Iraq’s Prime Minister Adel Abd’al-Mahdi issued a new executive order on July 1 that prohibits certain unauthorized activities being undertaken by elements of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF, or Hashd al-Sha’abi in Arabic). In combination with similar comments made by Abd’al-Mahdi on June 18, the government expects PMF units to follow government orders and has banned them from maintaining unauthorized bases and economic money-making schemes. The decree notes that “the existence of any armed faction operating secretly or openly outside these instructions is forbidden, and is to be considered outside the law and accordingly prosecuted.”
Michael Knights
Iraq’s Prime Minister Adel Abd’al-Mahdi issued a new executive order on July 1 that prohibits certain unauthorized activities being undertaken by elements of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF, or Hashd al-Sha’abi in Arabic). In combination with similar comments made by Abd’al-Mahdi on June 18, the government expects PMF units to follow government orders and has banned them from maintaining unauthorized bases and economic money-making schemes. The decree notes that “the existence of any armed faction operating secretly or openly outside these instructions is forbidden, and is to be considered outside the law and accordingly prosecuted.”
 The Nineveh Plains is ground zero for Abd’al-Mahdi’s instructions. As 
long ago as July 15, 2017, the Iraqi prime minister (Haider al-Abadi at 
the time) began trying to put the militias in the newly-liberated 
Nineveh Plains under government control. On August 2, 2018, Abadi signed
 executive order 1388 that required that the PMF to remove its forces 
from Mosul city and the Nineveh Plains, and transfer all PMF forces in 
Nineveh to the operational and administrative control of the army-led 
Nineveh Operations Command. In March 2019, Iraq’s current Prime Minister
 Adel Abd’al-Mahdi reiterated the order. At the time of writing, in July
 2019, these actions have not been taken. Two small militias, the PMF 
30th Brigade (Liwa al-Shabak/Quwat Sahl Nineveh) and PMF 50th Brigade 
(Kata'ib Babiliyun) have thumbed their noses at two successive prime 
ministers.
 The ethno-sectarian patchwork in the Nineveh Plains is clearly complex,
 but the crux of the issue is fairly simple: the PMF 30th and 50th 
brigades do not want to follow orders from the Iraqi prime minister, and
 nor do they want to give up lucrative money-making opportunities and 
Mafiosi-like power at the local level. They are a test case for whether 
Prime Minister Adel Abd’al-Mahdi has the authority and the serious 
intent to bring arms under the control of the state. If two tiny 
militias—under 2,500 fighters combined, at most—can ignore the Iraqi 
government—while still drawing payrolls from that government—what chance
 does Adel Abd’al-Mahdi have of bringing larger, foreign-backed militias
 under state control?
WHAT IS THE PROBLEM WITH MILITIAS IN THE NINEVEH PLAINS?
 The PMF units in the Nineveh Plains cannot simply be asked to “go 
home,” to use the clumsy and nonsensical formulation of former U.S. 
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. They are home, being that Liwa 
al-Shabak is manned largely by the Shabak minority (who only live in the
 Nineveh Plain and eastern Mosul city), while Kata'ib Babiliyun is 
partly manned by local Christians from the Nineveh Plains. Instead, the 
call for re-deployment is much more fine-tuned at a local level, and the
 key issue is that forces are led differently and act differently.
LIWA AL-SHABAK
 In the case of the PMF 30th Brigade (Liwa al-Shabak/Quwat Sahl 
Nineveh), the core problem is that the 1,000-1,500-strong force is 
disrupting Christian resettlement and getting mixed up in large-scale 
business operations that are expressly prohibited by the Iraqi prime 
minister’s new order. It would be no surprise if the unit garrisoned 
Shabak areas like Bazwiyah and numerous other towns on the eastern 
periphery of Mosul city, north and south of the Mosul to Erbil highway. 
But Liwa al-Shabak goes much further: it has also set up its 
headquarters in the depopulated Christian town of Bartella.
 I worked in that area back in the 2011-2014 period, and I know full 
well that Shabak hamlets exist as close as 500 metres west of Bartella, 
yet the town itself was always Christian and there was always a lot of 
mutual suspicion between the communities. Today, Liwa al-Shabak fighters
 have taken over property in Bashiqa, looted houses, and intimidated 
locals. This has prevented resettlement by Christians and Arabs, and 
blocked the ability of donor nations from visiting Bartella (notably 
U.S. government representatives).
 Liwa al-Shabak has also fallen into lucrative bad habits. They control 
the main trade highway between Mosul and Erbil, carrying all manner of 
goods to Mosul markets and serving as the main reconstruction artery. 
Their vehicle checkpoints provide significant money-making 
opportunities. As Reuters reported, their traditional connection to 
eastern Mosul suburbs and mechanics quarters have placed them in pole 
position in the scrap metal market, a massive industry due to the high 
levels of destruction in the city. In Mosul city on February 3, Liwa 
al-Shabak troops also took the unauthorized step of harassing a U.S. 
military foot patrol that was doing a government-authorized joint 
perimeter patrol outside its base.
KATA'IB BABILIYUN
 The case of the PMF 50th Brigade (Kata'ib Babiliyun) is very different.
 In the case of Liwa al-Shabak, there is no doubt that the troops and 
their leaders are local men. Kata'ib Babiliyun is a predominately 
outsider force that is pretending to be a local Christian unit. This 
1,000-strong force is located in eastern Mosul city and an area 
northeast of Mosul called Batnaya. Many of its fighters are 
non-Christians from Baghdad’s Sadr City, Muthanna, and Dhi Qar. Creating
 the widespread sense that an outsider non-Christian faction has 
hijacked local security forces, Kata’ib Babiliyun deters the return of 
many displaced persons to eastern Mosul and the northern Nineveh Plains.
 It is led by a Christian fighter from Baghdad called Rayan al-Khaldani,
 who previously fought in Shia militias in Baghdad during the civil 
war-like sectarian cleansing of the city. Khaldani is a fervent loyalist
 of Islamic Revolution Guard Corps Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani
 and PMF deputy chairman Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, both U.S.-designated 
terrorists. He celebrates each Quds Day with alacrity. Unsurprisingly, 
Khaldani is on very poor terms with the Christian leaders and population
 of the Nineveh Plains, including the widely respected Louis Raphaël 
Sako, the Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans and head of the Chaldean
 Catholic Church.
STEPS THAT NEED TO BE TAKEN
 At the time of writing, a frenetic process of negotiations and pressure
 campaigns is underway to reduce friction between these two militias and
 local minorities. It is indicative of the weakness of the Iraqi 
state—and the unhelpful stance taken by PMF leaders like Abu Mahdi 
al-Muhandis—that the Iraqi state needs to exert huge effort to convince a
 mere two to three thousand men to fall under state authority.
 The coming weeks will show whether real changes have occurred, or 
whether the Iraqi government has been neutralized by small militias and 
is instead trying to save face by claiming success. Markers of real 
success would include the removal of Liwa al-Shabak forces from Bartella
 town, and the removal of their checkpoints from the Mosul to Erbil 
highway. The removal of non-local members of Kata'ib Babiliyun, 
including Rayan al-Khaldani, would also be a positive sign. To backfill 
any gaps, the Nineveh Operations Command and its subordinate Iraqi Army 
16th division should receive small reinforcements to take change of the 
main highway. The Nineveh Protection Units and other Christian units 
should return to Bartella and Batnaya.
 A joint security mechanism should be established in the Nineveh Plains 
to bring all the above forces together in one arrangement, including 
Liwa al-Shabak. Remaining local members of Kata'ib Babiliyun should be 
recognized. Ideally, all the Shabak and Christian forces in the Nineveh 
Plains—plus some Yezidis, Kurds, Arabs, and Kakai—should be merged into a
 new force. This could be a new Federal Police brigade, army brigade or 
Emergency Police regiment.
 If taken rapidly, these steps could show observers inside Iraq and 
outside that the government in Baghdad is truly in charge. Iraq’s Prime 
Minister Adel Abd’al-Mahdi is known for the grace of his words, but less
 so for the boldness of his actions. This small test case is one way to 
restore some balance to this equation.
Michael Knights, a senior fellow at The Washington Institute, has spent long periods working in Iraq since 2003, including considerable time embedded with the country’s security forces.This article was originally published on the Iraq In Context website.
 
