Baghdad: Fighter jets screeched overhead, and tanks rolled under the Victory Arch in the Iraqi capital on the morning of 6 January in honour of the country’s Army Day.
Further south and across the border in Iran, on the same day, a “radar-evading” warship was unveiled at a ceremony in the southern port of Bandar Abbas. The warship was reportedly 15 months in the making, while its namesake had been venerated by many for much longer.
The vessel bears the nom de guerre of Iraqi militia commander Abu Mahdi Muhandis, for whom multiple commemoration ceremonies were held in the first week of 2024 to mark the fourth anniversary of his 3 January 2020 assassination in Baghdad by the US.
Lt. Gen. Abdul Amir Yarallah, the chief of staff of the Iraqi army, is seen in a video of one of these ceremonies striding across a US flag. Stepping on flags is seen as a way to show disrespect towards a nation. Yarallah has long made no secret of his deep respect for Muhandis.
Yarallah was most recently in the US in August as part of an Iraqi delegation invited by the US Department of Defense to discuss the future of security cooperation between the two countries. One of the issues discussed was that of intelligence exchange.
Muhandis was the former deputy commander of Iraq’s official Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF) and was assassinated alongside Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) general Qassem Soleimani in a US drone strike near the Baghdad airport in January 2020.
The strike led to an uproar of protest over what was seen as a blatant disregard for Iraqi sovereignty. Four years later, US forces remain in Iraq on some bases as part of the international coalition against the Islamic State (IS). PMF commanders have been especially strident in their calls for all US forces to be removed from the country.