What's new

Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad

nangyale

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
May 31, 2010
Messages
2,251
Reaction score
2
Country
Pakistan
Location
United Kingdom
Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad
Offers Them $500 Stipend, Residency Benefits
WO-AS389_IRAFGH_P_20140515190138.jpg
ENLARGE
A 2013 funeral at a Damascus shrine Afghans are called on to defend. Reuters
By
Farnaz Fassihi
May 22, 2014

Iran has been recruiting thousands of Afghan refugees to fight in Syria, offering $500 a month and Iranian residency to help the Assad regime beat back rebel forces, according to Afghans and a Western official.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, recruits and trains Shiite militias to fight in Syria. Details of their recruitment efforts were posted this week on a blog focused on Afghan refugees in Iran and confirmed by the office of Grand Ayatollah Mohaghegh Kabuli, an Afghan religious leader in the Iranian holy city of Qom. A member of the IRGC also confirmed the details.

"They [IRGC] find a connection to the refugee community and work on convincing our youth to go and fight in Syria," said the office administrator of Ayatollah Kabuli, reached by telephone in Qom. "They give them everything from salary to residency." Tehran is also offering them school registration for their children and charity cards.

Many Afghan young men have written to Ayatollah Kabuli to ask whether fighting in Syria was religiously sanctioned, his office said. He responded only if they were defending Shiite shrines. Lately, his office said he has kept silent and not even attended funerals of Afghans killed in Syria.


On Thursday, a large funeral procession attended by local and religious officials was held in the northeastern city of Mashhad, near the Afghan border, for four Afghan refugees killed in Syria. The coffins were shrouded in green cloth and the men's pictures were pinned to the sides, according to reports on Shiite religious websites and a news agency linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

Reports of funerals for the Afghan recruits who die in Syria began to emerge in November. Recently, there have been more frequent reports of such deaths popping up in Iranian media.

Hamid Babaei, a spokesman for Iran's U.N. mission, said allegations that Iran is sending Afghan refugees to Syria as fighters are unfounded. "Iranian presence in the country is solely advisory in nature in order to help counter the extremist... al-Qaeda groups from committing more massacre and bloodshed," he said.

Since the conflict started in Syria three years ago, the Islamic Republic has played an instrumental role in keeping President Bashar al-Assad in power. Iran has funded, trained, armed and sent foot soldiers and commanders to Syria to assist Mr. Assad's army.

Its close ally Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant and political group, has also sent soldiers and commanders to defend Syria's regime.

The Revolutionary Guards organize and command the Shiite militias sent to Syria.

Commanders work closely with Syrian army commanders to plan strategy and train Syrian soldiers in guerrilla warfare, according to Guards commanders.

As a result, in less than a year Mr. Assad has gone from being at the brink of collapse at the time of the chemical attacks against opposition strongholds last August to planning another four years in office with elections set for June.

Both Iran and Hezbollah have openly taken credit for their efforts in Syria. Gen. Hossein Hamedani, a senior Guards commander involved in planning war strategy in Syria, said last week that with God's help, Iran had trained an extra 130,000 soldiers ready for dispatch.

Thanks to the planning and wisdom of Iran's leaders, Syria's regime could enjoy "some stability," he said.

The 130,000 was an apparent reference to all the Shiite militias including Iranians, Hezbollah, Afghans and other foreign fighters.

Iran also took credit for the recent peace deal between opposition rebels and the regime in Homs, whereby the rebels evacuated the city and surrendered control to the government.

"Nothing happens in Syria without Iran's hand," said Hossein Sheikholeslam, a lawmaker and parliament's deputy head of foreign affairs.

Syria's civil war shows no sign of subsiding and both Iran and Hezbollah are wary of losing their trained men on the ground and the risk of public backlash with dead bodies returning home every week.

A Western official in Iran said recruiting Afghans was part of a shifting strategy to send poor foot soldiers to the front lines from a community with little clout to minimize casualties among Hezbollah and Guards members and political fallout.

The Afghan recruits, like Hezbollah and most Iranians, are all Shiites and support the Syrian regime dominated by minority Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The rebels are predominantly Sunni and backed by the Sunni powers of the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The Guards are convincing Afghans to join the war in Syria by playing off Shiite-Sunni sectarian rivalries.

They emphasize the role of hard-line Sunni rebel groups affiliated with al Qaeda, said the Western official.

"Iran wants to play a command and control role in Syria and with the Afghan refugees, they are purchasing mercenaries to do the fighting for them," said Nader Hashemi, director of the center for Middle East Studies at University of Denver, and an expert on Iran and Syria.

U.S. defense officials in Washington have noted with alarm that fighters from around the region have become involved in Syrian civil war, and don't doubt that Afghan fighters have joined in.

"One of the most concerning aspects of the Syrian conflict from a U.S. security perspective is that it is attracting foreign fighters from across the region and around the world," Matthew Spence, a senior defense official, told Congress recently.

"We assess that there are now significantly more foreign fighters in Syria than there were foreign fighters in Iraq at the height of the Iraq war," he said, referring to both sides in the civil war.

Afghan refugees are among the most vulnerable and poor in Iran.


There are about one million registered Afghan refugees in Iran, according to the U.N. refugee agency.


But additionally, there are as many as 2 million unregistered migrants, according to Human Rights Watch. Up to 800 Afghans try to cross illegally into Iran every day, according to Afghanistan's refugee ministry.


They are not allowed to officially work, attend school or register marriages or births.


Most Afghans work as day laborers in construction for meager salaries.


Reza Ismaeli was a 19-year-old Afghan refugee living in Mashhad. He was a state champion in bodybuilding before he was recruited to fight in Syria, according to an account of a friend and fellow Afghan fighter published in December by the Fars news agency, which is linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

After a few months of fighting in Syria, he became one of the leaders of the all-Afghan battalion called ‘Fatemiyoun, named for the Prophet Muhammad's daughter Fatima. Iranian news reports say Fatemiyoun battalion is in Syria to defend the Shiite shrine of Sayeda Zeinab in the suburbs of Damascus.

Mr. Ismaeli was killed in December, according to Fars, in a battle with opposition rebels near Damascus. "The battle was very intense. We only had a few hours of cease fire every few days," an Afghan refugee fighter named Abu Heydar told Fars. Mr. Ismaeili was captured by rebels and beheaded, the report said.

A series of pictures of Mr. Ismaeili on Fars show a short, baby-faced teenager in military fatigues and dark sunglasses posing with a machine gun in front of a tank and then next to a missile stuck in the ground. And then his decapitated bloody head held by a rebel soldier. The Iranian battalion found his headless body and sent back to his parents in Iran, Fars said.

In a blog dedicated to issues of Afghan refugees in Iran, young Afghan men debate whether they should go to Syria.

"Why is Syria our business? We don't have peace in our own country and we have to go become martyrs for Iran's holy war?" wrote one.

—Julian E. Barnes contributed to this article.
 
I read that there's even Hazara's participating in the war in Syria.
 
What a selfish strategy. It is documented men in extended combat come back traumatised and do strange things. This will maintain circle of violence in Afghanistan. How saddening. Just leave them alone so they can build their country.
 
What a selfish strategy. It is documented men in extended combat come back traumatised and do strange things. This will maintain circle of violence in Afghanistan. How saddening. Just leave them alone so they can build their country.


Hi,

Iran and leave them alone---. That is not possible. It fulfills Iran's agenda pretty good.
 
Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad
Offers Them $500 Stipend, Residency Benefits
WO-AS389_IRAFGH_P_20140515190138.jpg
ENLARGE
A 2013 funeral at a Damascus shrine Afghans are called on to defend. Reuters
By
Farnaz Fassihi
May 22, 2014

Iran has been recruiting thousands of Afghan refugees to fight in Syria, offering $500 a month and Iranian residency to help the Assad regime beat back rebel forces, according to Afghans and a Western official.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, recruits and trains Shiite militias to fight in Syria. Details of their recruitment efforts were posted this week on a blog focused on Afghan refugees in Iran and confirmed by the office of Grand Ayatollah Mohaghegh Kabuli, an Afghan religious leader in the Iranian holy city of Qom. A member of the IRGC also confirmed the details.

"They [IRGC] find a connection to the refugee community and work on convincing our youth to go and fight in Syria," said the office administrator of Ayatollah Kabuli, reached by telephone in Qom. "They give them everything from salary to residency." Tehran is also offering them school registration for their children and charity cards.

Many Afghan young men have written to Ayatollah Kabuli to ask whether fighting in Syria was religiously sanctioned, his office said. He responded only if they were defending Shiite shrines. Lately, his office said he has kept silent and not even attended funerals of Afghans killed in Syria.


On Thursday, a large funeral procession attended by local and religious officials was held in the northeastern city of Mashhad, near the Afghan border, for four Afghan refugees killed in Syria. The coffins were shrouded in green cloth and the men's pictures were pinned to the sides, according to reports on Shiite religious websites and a news agency linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

Reports of funerals for the Afghan recruits who die in Syria began to emerge in November. Recently, there have been more frequent reports of such deaths popping up in Iranian media.

Hamid Babaei, a spokesman for Iran's U.N. mission, said allegations that Iran is sending Afghan refugees to Syria as fighters are unfounded. "Iranian presence in the country is solely advisory in nature in order to help counter the extremist... al-Qaeda groups from committing more massacre and bloodshed," he said.

Since the conflict started in Syria three years ago, the Islamic Republic has played an instrumental role in keeping President Bashar al-Assad in power. Iran has funded, trained, armed and sent foot soldiers and commanders to Syria to assist Mr. Assad's army.

Its close ally Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant and political group, has also sent soldiers and commanders to defend Syria's regime.

The Revolutionary Guards organize and command the Shiite militias sent to Syria.

Commanders work closely with Syrian army commanders to plan strategy and train Syrian soldiers in guerrilla warfare, according to Guards commanders.

As a result, in less than a year Mr. Assad has gone from being at the brink of collapse at the time of the chemical attacks against opposition strongholds last August to planning another four years in office with elections set for June.

Both Iran and Hezbollah have openly taken credit for their efforts in Syria. Gen. Hossein Hamedani, a senior Guards commander involved in planning war strategy in Syria, said last week that with God's help, Iran had trained an extra 130,000 soldiers ready for dispatch.

Thanks to the planning and wisdom of Iran's leaders, Syria's regime could enjoy "some stability," he said.

The 130,000 was an apparent reference to all the Shiite militias including Iranians, Hezbollah, Afghans and other foreign fighters.

Iran also took credit for the recent peace deal between opposition rebels and the regime in Homs, whereby the rebels evacuated the city and surrendered control to the government.

"Nothing happens in Syria without Iran's hand," said Hossein Sheikholeslam, a lawmaker and parliament's deputy head of foreign affairs.

Syria's civil war shows no sign of subsiding and both Iran and Hezbollah are wary of losing their trained men on the ground and the risk of public backlash with dead bodies returning home every week.

A Western official in Iran said recruiting Afghans was part of a shifting strategy to send poor foot soldiers to the front lines from a community with little clout to minimize casualties among Hezbollah and Guards members and political fallout.

The Afghan recruits, like Hezbollah and most Iranians, are all Shiites and support the Syrian regime dominated by minority Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The rebels are predominantly Sunni and backed by the Sunni powers of the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The Guards are convincing Afghans to join the war in Syria by playing off Shiite-Sunni sectarian rivalries.

They emphasize the role of hard-line Sunni rebel groups affiliated with al Qaeda, said the Western official.

"Iran wants to play a command and control role in Syria and with the Afghan refugees, they are purchasing mercenaries to do the fighting for them," said Nader Hashemi, director of the center for Middle East Studies at University of Denver, and an expert on Iran and Syria.

U.S. defense officials in Washington have noted with alarm that fighters from around the region have become involved in Syrian civil war, and don't doubt that Afghan fighters have joined in.

"One of the most concerning aspects of the Syrian conflict from a U.S. security perspective is that it is attracting foreign fighters from across the region and around the world," Matthew Spence, a senior defense official, told Congress recently.

"We assess that there are now significantly more foreign fighters in Syria than there were foreign fighters in Iraq at the height of the Iraq war," he said, referring to both sides in the civil war.

Afghan refugees are among the most vulnerable and poor in Iran.


There are about one million registered Afghan refugees in Iran, according to the U.N. refugee agency.


But additionally, there are as many as 2 million unregistered migrants, according to Human Rights Watch. Up to 800 Afghans try to cross illegally into Iran every day, according to Afghanistan's refugee ministry.


They are not allowed to officially work, attend school or register marriages or births.


Most Afghans work as day laborers in construction for meager salaries.


Reza Ismaeli was a 19-year-old Afghan refugee living in Mashhad. He was a state champion in bodybuilding before he was recruited to fight in Syria, according to an account of a friend and fellow Afghan fighter published in December by the Fars news agency, which is linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

After a few months of fighting in Syria, he became one of the leaders of the all-Afghan battalion called ‘Fatemiyoun, named for the Prophet Muhammad's daughter Fatima. Iranian news reports say Fatemiyoun battalion is in Syria to defend the Shiite shrine of Sayeda Zeinab in the suburbs of Damascus.

Mr. Ismaeli was killed in December, according to Fars, in a battle with opposition rebels near Damascus. "The battle was very intense. We only had a few hours of cease fire every few days," an Afghan refugee fighter named Abu Heydar told Fars. Mr. Ismaeili was captured by rebels and beheaded, the report said.

A series of pictures of Mr. Ismaeili on Fars show a short, baby-faced teenager in military fatigues and dark sunglasses posing with a machine gun in front of a tank and then next to a missile stuck in the ground. And then his decapitated bloody head held by a rebel soldier. The Iranian battalion found his headless body and sent back to his parents in Iran, Fars said.

In a blog dedicated to issues of Afghan refugees in Iran, young Afghan men debate whether they should go to Syria.

"Why is Syria our business? We don't have peace in our own country and we have to go become martyrs for Iran's holy war?" wrote one.

—Julian E. Barnes contributed to this article.

Everybody exploits the poor. But, perhaps both Afghanistan and Pakistan deserve their current fates as their people have not been able to evolve a close symbiotic relationship. Actually it could have been Iran, Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan -- a tight confederation like structure. Iran, Turkey, Pakistan have the intellectual power, they have land, Afghanistan shares cultural bonds: but the Mad Iranian Mullahs have their sights set on the leadership of the Arab world (w-the-f) ? -- how delusional can one be? -- and the Afghan people have their sights set at dismembering Pakistan -- how fcuked up is that -- at least we all are captivated by Bollywood (sans Turkey thankfully) -- lol -- No wonder our houses are on fire. Fiddles anybody?
 
They are lying to these Afghans saying the job is not dangerous and they will get paid good. 99% of them get killed and they don't even get paid. These mullah snakes have no morality nor honor.
 
Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad
Offers Them $500 Stipend, Residency Benefits
WO-AS389_IRAFGH_P_20140515190138.jpg

A 2013 funeral at a Damascus shrine Afghans are called on to defend. Reuters
By
Farnaz Fassihi
May 22, 2014

Iran has been recruiting thousands of Afghan refugees to fight in Syria, offering $500 a month and Iranian residency to help the Assad regime beat back rebel forces, according to Afghans and a Western official.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, recruits and trains Shiite militias to fight in Syria. Details of their recruitment efforts were posted this week on a blog focused on Afghan refugees in Iran and confirmed by the office of Grand Ayatollah Mohaghegh Kabuli, an Afghan religious leader in the Iranian holy city of Qom. A member of the IRGC also confirmed the details.

"They [IRGC] find a connection to the refugee community and work on convincing our youth to go and fight in Syria," said the office administrator of Ayatollah Kabuli, reached by telephone in Qom. "They give them everything from salary to residency." Tehran is also offering them school registration for their children and charity cards.

Many Afghan young men have written to Ayatollah Kabuli to ask whether fighting in Syria was religiously sanctioned, his office said. He responded only if they were defending Shiite shrines. Lately, his office said he has kept silent and not even attended funerals of Afghans killed in Syria.


On Thursday, a large funeral procession attended by local and religious officials was held in the northeastern city of Mashhad, near the Afghan border, for four Afghan refugees killed in Syria. The coffins were shrouded in green cloth and the men's pictures were pinned to the sides, according to reports on Shiite religious websites and a news agency linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

Reports of funerals for the Afghan recruits who die in Syria began to emerge in November. Recently, there have been more frequent reports of such deaths popping up in Iranian media.

Hamid Babaei, a spokesman for Iran's U.N. mission, said allegations that Iran is sending Afghan refugees to Syria as fighters are unfounded. "Iranian presence in the country is solely advisory in nature in order to help counter the extremist... al-Qaeda groups from committing more massacre and bloodshed," he said.

Since the conflict started in Syria three years ago, the Islamic Republic has played an instrumental role in keeping President Bashar al-Assad in power. Iran has funded, trained, armed and sent foot soldiers and commanders to Syria to assist Mr. Assad's army.

Its close ally Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant and political group, has also sent soldiers and commanders to defend Syria's regime.

The Revolutionary Guards organize and command the Shiite militias sent to Syria.

Commanders work closely with Syrian army commanders to plan strategy and train Syrian soldiers in guerrilla warfare, according to Guards commanders.

As a result, in less than a year Mr. Assad has gone from being at the brink of collapse at the time of the chemical attacks against opposition strongholds last August to planning another four years in office with elections set for June.

Both Iran and Hezbollah have openly taken credit for their efforts in Syria. Gen. Hossein Hamedani, a senior Guards commander involved in planning war strategy in Syria, said last week that with God's help, Iran had trained an extra 130,000 soldiers ready for dispatch.

Thanks to the planning and wisdom of Iran's leaders, Syria's regime could enjoy "some stability," he said.

The 130,000 was an apparent reference to all the Shiite militias including Iranians, Hezbollah, Afghans and other foreign fighters.

Iran also took credit for the recent peace deal between opposition rebels and the regime in Homs, whereby the rebels evacuated the city and surrendered control to the government.

"Nothing happens in Syria without Iran's hand," said Hossein Sheikholeslam, a lawmaker and parliament's deputy head of foreign affairs.

Syria's civil war shows no sign of subsiding and both Iran and Hezbollah are wary of losing their trained men on the ground and the risk of public backlash with dead bodies returning home every week.

A Western official in Iran said recruiting Afghans was part of a shifting strategy to send poor foot soldiers to the front lines from a community with little clout to minimize casualties among Hezbollah and Guards members and political fallout.

The Afghan recruits, like Hezbollah and most Iranians, are all Shiites and support the Syrian regime dominated by minority Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The rebels are predominantly Sunni and backed by the Sunni powers of the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The Guards are convincing Afghans to join the war in Syria by playing off Shiite-Sunni sectarian rivalries.

They emphasize the role of hard-line Sunni rebel groups affiliated with al Qaeda, said the Western official.

"Iran wants to play a command and control role in Syria and with the Afghan refugees, they are purchasing mercenaries to do the fighting for them," said Nader Hashemi, director of the center for Middle East Studies at University of Denver, and an expert on Iran and Syria.

U.S. defense officials in Washington have noted with alarm that fighters from around the region have become involved in Syrian civil war, and don't doubt that Afghan fighters have joined in.

"One of the most concerning aspects of the Syrian conflict from a U.S. security perspective is that it is attracting foreign fighters from across the region and around the world," Matthew Spence, a senior defense official, told Congress recently.

"We assess that there are now significantly more foreign fighters in Syria than there were foreign fighters in Iraq at the height of the Iraq war," he said, referring to both sides in the civil war.

Afghan refugees are among the most vulnerable and poor in Iran.

There are about one million registered Afghan refugees in Iran, according to the U.N. refugee agency.

But additionally, there are as many as 2 million unregistered migrants, according to Human Rights Watch. Up to 800 Afghans try to cross illegally into Iran every day, according to Afghanistan's refugee ministry.

They are not allowed to officially work, attend school or register marriages or births.

Most Afghans work as day laborers in construction for meager salaries.

Reza Ismaeli was a 19-year-old Afghan refugee living in Mashhad. He was a state champion in bodybuilding before he was recruited to fight in Syria, according to an account of a friend and fellow Afghan fighter published in December by the Fars news agency, which is linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

After a few months of fighting in Syria, he became one of the leaders of the all-Afghan battalion called ‘Fatemiyoun, named for the Prophet Muhammad's daughter Fatima. Iranian news reports say Fatemiyoun battalion is in Syria to defend the Shiite shrine of Sayeda Zeinab in the suburbs of Damascus.

Mr. Ismaeli was killed in December, according to Fars, in a battle with opposition rebels near Damascus. "The battle was very intense. We only had a few hours of cease fire every few days," an Afghan refugee fighter named Abu Heydar told Fars. Mr. Ismaeili was captured by rebels and beheaded, the report said.

A series of pictures of Mr. Ismaeili on Fars show a short, baby-faced teenager in military fatigues and dark sunglasses posing with a machine gun in front of a tank and then next to a missile stuck in the ground. And then his decapitated bloody head held by a rebel soldier. The Iranian battalion found his headless body and sent back to his parents in Iran, Fars said.

In a blog dedicated to issues of Afghan refugees in Iran, young Afghan men debate whether they should go to Syria.

"Why is Syria our business? We don't have peace in our own country and we have to go become martyrs for Iran's holy war?" wrote one.


—Julian E. Barnes contributed to this article.

Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad - WSJ

Not only Afghans though.

93516_760.jpg


Obligatory photo with Soleimani and then death a few days later.

93520_701.jpg


ciosimjwiaazvhddswqs-jpg.232477


All terrorist trash should follow suit alongside other Al-Assad mass-murderers. They will be rooted out and return in coffins in all the Arab countries where they set foot.

@WebMaster @Horus @Jango @Jungibaaz @Emmie @Manticore @waz @Chak Bamu @T-Faz

This thread should be moved to the ME section of the forum as it concerns Syria and Iran which are both ME countries. Not only Afghanistan.
 
Last edited:
@Saif al-Arab thread already exists, stop creating multiple threads.

Sir, this thread belongs on the ME section of the forum as this unfortunate practice takes place in Syria and Iran is also a ME country.

I did not know about that.

@beast89

Here, your brethren are used as cannon fodder by your Farsi Kawli masters.:lol:
 
Last edited:
That is strange I thought Iran has problems with Taliban in Afghanistan as well. Instead of utilizing them against Afghan Taliban they are utilizing them for Syria. If that is true then they are wasting their resources here rather because it is much easier options to Equip and Support Iraqi Militia or supporting Kurdish Groups further against ISIS as they are quite close and its their Local Problem but Afghans quite far away at the same time their is Taliban related Problem in Afghanistan as well.

This revelation would motivate ISIS to start operations in Afghanistan as well citing Iranians using Afghans against them and could be able to convince Afghan Taliban to develop some Understanding on this one where Taliban are refraining from working with ISIS. Another thing that is mentioned is that they are using Shia-Sunni Rivalry to convince Afghans in a country where Sunnis are Majority and also have dominated Insurgency in the country as well. Iranians need to rethink on what they are doing because this isnt going to work in the long run.
 
They are lying to these Afghans saying the job is not dangerous and they will get paid good. 99% of them get killed and they don't even get paid. These mullah snakes have no morality nor honor.

How can they not know that? They asked if the war was being approved or sanctioned.
 

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom