Iraqi Lawmakers Dig In Against Dissolution of Hashd al-Shaabi Militia Forces
A senior Iraqi parliamentarian stated on 28 May 2026 that the legislature will not permit the merger or dissolution of the Hashd al-Shaabi paramilitary network, calling it indispensable to Iraqi sovereignty — a position that reflects deeper structural tensions between Baghdad, Washington, and Tehran.

A senior member of Iraq's parliament declared on 28 May 2026 that the legislature would resist any attempt to merge or dissolve the Hashd al-Shaabi paramilitary network, asserting that the force is indispensable to preserving Iraqi sovereignty. Ahmad al-Shammari, speaking on behalf of the parliamentary bloc, said the Hashd — the Popular Mobilization Forces — "is the guarantor of maintaining the sovereignty of Iraq," and that the parliament would never sanction their absorption into regular security structures or their disbandment.
The statement lands in the middle of a long-simmering debate about the future of Iraq's armed landscape. Since the Hashd al-Shaabi were formally integrated into the state's security apparatus in 2016, questions about their autonomy, their chain of command, and their relationship to Iran have never fully receded. Successive Iraqi governments have navigated a narrow path between demands from Washington for Tehran-aligned militias to fall fully under state control, and the political weight of the Hashd's veteran commanders, many of whom built their constituencies on the fight against ISIS.
The Force That Wouldn't Disappear
The Hashd al-Shaabi began as a collection of largely volunteer Shia militias stood up in 2014 under a fatwa from Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, responding to the rapid collapse of Iraqi military positions in the north and east. By the time ISIS was pushed back from Mosul in 2017, the force had become a permanent fixture — several of its component brigades have direct institutional and operational ties to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force. The formal 2016 integration law nominally placed them under the prime minister's authority, but the reality inside the force has always been more complicated: budgets, command relationships, and political loyalty circuits have not always run through Baghdad.
Al-Shammari's statement makes clear that within the current parliamentary arithmetic, that ambiguity is a feature rather than a bug. Framing the Hashd as the "guarantor of sovereignty" is a direct rebuttal of a counter-narrative — that Iraq's sovereignty is compromised precisely by the existence of armed groups whose primary loyalty runs to a foreign power. The language is calibrated to position any dissolution effort as an act of subordination to external pressure, presumably from Washington.
The Sovereignty Question in Iraqi Politics
The Hashd's status has become a proxy for broader questions about Iraq's strategic orientation. Iraqi governments since 2003 have been navigating between Tehran and Washington, between hydrocarbon revenue management and corruption, between sectarian power-sharing and demands for functional governance. The Hashd sits at the intersection of all of these: it is a military instrument, a political constituency, a patronage network, and a symbol of resistance to both ISIS and what its supporters describe as American occupation.
What is notable about al-Shammari's framing is the directness with which it equates the Hashd's institutional survival with Iraqi sovereignty as a whole. This is not a narrow militia-defence argument; it is a claim that Iraq as a sovereign state depends on the continued existence of an armed force that many Western analysts regard as an instrument of Iranian regional policy. The argument, however, has an internal coherence: in a country where the state security apparatus has historically been unreliable, where military defeats have been catastrophic, and where external interventions have been frequent, a standing force with deep local roots and demonstrated combat capability looks like sovereignty insurance to its defenders.
Western governments, and the US military presence in particular, have long pressed for the Hashd to be fully brought under state control — meaning Iraqi government control, and by extension, American influence over their operations and strategic direction. The debate over US troop withdrawal timelines and the status of American forces in Iraq makes this a live political question. For Iraqi factions aligned with Tehran, any formal restructuring of the Hashd that weakens its operational independence is read as a concession to Washington.
What the Statement Does and Does Not Resolve
Al-Shammari's declaration is a political positioning exercise as much as a policy statement. It signals to Iran-aligned Hashd commanders that the parliament will not be a venue for their disassembly. It signals to Washington that there is no legislative appetite for a structural solution to the Iran-linked militia question. And it signals to Baghdad that the Hashd's political base will resist any prime minister who attempts to bring the force fully to heel.
The sources do not indicate that a formal dissolution or merger proposal is currently on the parliamentary table — the statement reads as preemptive rather than reactive, a line drawn before an expected pressure campaign rather than in response to an active initiative. Whether that pressure materialises depends on the trajectory of US-Iraq negotiations on force posture, on the internal balance of Iraq's ruling coalition, and on whether the Hashd's political opponents can build a coherent alternative argument.
What remains unaddressed in the available sources is the question of internal Hashd politics: whether all components of the network are aligned with the position that their institutional independence must be preserved at all costs, and whether younger veterans and more reform-oriented commanders share the same posture. The Hashd is not a monolith — it includes multiple brigades with distinct histories, leaderships, and relationships to Tehran. Any resolution of its status that is imposed from outside rather than negotiated from within would likely encounter fractures.
The parliamentary declaration closes off one avenue of restructuring. It does not resolve the underlying tension between a state that wants to exercise monopoly over armed force and an armed network that considers itself a sovereign institution in its own right. That tension will continue to shape Iraqi politics and the architecture of USIran competition in the country for the foreseeable future.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en/38241
- https://t.me/JahanTasnim/18647