Babylon Movement
The Babylon Movement is an Iraqi political party established in 2014 by Rayan al-Kildani, functioning as the political arm of the Babylon Brigade (Kataib Babiliyoun), the 50th Brigade of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), which purports to defend Chaldean and Assyrian Christian communities in the Nineveh Plains against threats like ISIS.[1][2] Despite its Christian branding, the movement has faced allegations of recruiting predominantly Shia Muslim fighters from southern Iraq rather than local Christians, and maintaining close ties to Iran-backed militias, enabling it to secure four out of five parliamentary seats reserved for minorities in the 2021 Iraqi elections amid claims of voter intimidation and fraud.[1][3][4] Al-Kildani, the movement's leader and US-sanctioned in 2023 for human rights abuses including extortion, kidnapping, and property seizures targeting Christians and other minorities, has been accused of forcibly absorbing local Christian militias like the Nineveh Plains Protection Units (NPU) and displacing residents in historic Christian towns such as Bartella and Baghdede to consolidate control.[5][6][7]Origins and Early Development
Founding and Initial Objectives (2014)
The Babylon Brigade, the armed foundation of the Babylon Movement, was established in 2014 by Rayan al-Kildani, a Chaldean Christian militiaman, amid the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) offensive that overran the Nineveh Plains in northern Iraq.[1] This rapid advance by ISIS in June and August 2014 led to the targeted persecution, displacement, and massacres of Chaldean, Syriac, and Assyrian Christian populations in areas such as Qaraqosh, Bartella, and Tel Keppe.[8] The group's initial objectives centered on defending these vulnerable minority communities from ISIS aggression and preserving their presence in ancestral territories.[8] Al-Kildani positioned the brigade as a protective force for Iraq's endangered Christian demographic, which had already diminished significantly since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.[8] Recruitment initially drew from local Chaldean Catholics and other Christian groups in the region, emphasizing grassroots mobilization to counter the existential threat posed by ISIS.[1] From its inception, the Babylon Brigade framed itself as a non-sectarian entity committed to Iraq's broader national defense against terrorism, aligning with government efforts without pursuing explicit political goals at the time.[8] This approach sought to foster cross-communal trust and integrate into the Popular Mobilization Units framework, prioritizing security for minorities over partisan agendas.[8]Formation of the Military Wing
The Kataib Babiliyoun, or Babylon Brigades, serving as the military wing of the Babylon Movement, was established in 2014 amid the Islamic State's rapid advance into northern Iraq, which triggered mass displacement and targeted killings of Christians, Muslims, and other minorities.[8] The brigade was positioned as a defensive force for Iraq's Christian communities, operating initially under the emerging Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) structure before formal integration as the 50th Brigade.[8][1] Recruitment efforts extended beyond northern Christian populations, drawing predominantly from Shia Muslim communities in southern Iraq, which led to a mixed-force composition where non-Christians formed the bulk of fighters rather than a purely representative unit for northern minorities.[1] This approach allowed for quicker scaling but diverged from the brigade's public image as a Christian-led militia, with leadership under Rayan al-Kildani emphasizing protection of ancestral lands while relying on broader sectarian networks.[8][1] Early logistical backing came through the PMF umbrella, which supplied funding, arms, and training coordinated by the Iraqi government, enabling the brigade's organizational setup and operational readiness without independent infrastructure.[1] Ties to Shia factions like the Badr Organization further facilitated resource access, though external Iranian assistance, including from the Quds Force, supplemented these efforts in the initial phase.[8][9]Military Role and Operations
Integration into Popular Mobilization Forces
The Babylon Brigade, the military wing of the Babylon Movement, achieved formal integration into Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) as the 50th Brigade during the PMF's official institutionalization in 2016.[1] This process followed the broader establishment of the PMF framework under Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's administration, which codified volunteer militias formed in response to the ISIS offensive.[10] The integration stemmed from Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani's fatwa issued on June 13, 2014, which called for able-bodied Iraqis to volunteer for national defense against ISIS, leading to the rapid formation of groups like the Babylon Brigade in 2014.[11] By 2016, parliamentary legislation recognized the PMF as a state-sanctioned entity subordinate to the prime minister, granting participating units legal militia status, access to government-issued weapons, and integration into the national security apparatus.[12] For the Babylon Brigade, this elevated it from an informal, ad-hoc Christian volunteer force to a recognized subunit with a defined command hierarchy under Rayan al-Kildani, enabling structured subunits focused on specific operational theaters.[1] Key benefits included direct state funding, such as monthly salaries for approximately 1,500 to 2,000 registered fighters, which improved logistical sustainability and recruitment.[13] The status also afforded operational autonomy in designated areas, including the Nineveh Plains and select Baghdad districts, where the brigade maintained checkpoints and security responsibilities without full subordination to regular Iraqi army commands.[14] This formalization enhanced the brigade's resource access while embedding it within Iraq's hybrid security structure, though it retained distinct internal organization.[15]Combat Against ISIS and Achievements
The Babylon Brigade initiated combat against ISIS shortly after its establishment in June 2014, conducting its first significant engagement at Camp Speicher near Tikrit in September 2014 as part of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF). Composed of around 1,000 primarily Chaldean Christian fighters, the unit focused on countering ISIS incursions into the Nineveh Plains, where ISIS had seized control of Christian-majority areas in August 2014, displacing tens of thousands. By participating in PMF-coordinated defensive operations, the brigade helped maintain frontlines that limited ISIS's ability to expand further into minority-held territories, thereby averting additional mass exoduses beyond the initial waves that affected over 100,000 residents.[16][17] In the broader context of the 2016–2017 Mosul offensive, the Babylon Brigade contributed to ground operations aimed at liberating key towns in the Nineveh Plains from ISIS occupation. This included involvement in the recapture of Qaraqosh (also known as Bakhdida), a major Christian center, in October 2016, and Tel Keppe in January 2017, efforts that restored Iraqi government control over these areas after nearly three years of ISIS rule marked by systematic destruction of churches and cultural heritage. These actions aligned with the PMF's role in encircling and expelling ISIS fighters, with the brigade's localized knowledge aiding in securing perimeters and protecting irreplaceable sites such as monasteries and historical artifacts from looting or demolition. While integrated PMF operations preclude isolating the brigade's precise tactical impacts, its sustained presence is acknowledged as instrumental in stabilizing the plains against ISIS remnants during the campaign's final phases.[18][16] Empirical indicators of the brigade's engagement include reported losses in personnel and materiel during frontline clashes, though comprehensive public data on casualties—estimated in the dozens for minority PMF units overall—remains limited due to the opaque nature of militia reporting. The unit's achievements are further evidenced by its role in preventing the total erasure of Christian demographics in recaptured zones, where pre-ISIS populations of 50,000–60,000 in Qaraqosh alone had fled, enabling partial returns post-liberation despite ongoing security challenges. Independent assessments note that such minority-led formations filled gaps left by retreating Iraqi army units in 2014, providing causal continuity to the eventual territorial rollback of ISIS by December 2017.[16]Post-ISIS Activities and Expansion
Following the defeat of ISIS in the Nineveh Plains by 2017, the Babylon Brigade, as the 50th Brigade of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), assumed a role in securing liberated Christian-majority areas such as Qaraqosh, Bartella, Hamdaniya, Tel Kayf, Baghdeda, and Karamlesh through the operation of checkpoints and patrols.[19][20] These efforts included temporary oversight of the Nineveh Plains Protection Units' (NPU) 13th Regiment until October 20, 2023, which contributed to local security in select towns.[20] However, the brigade disregarded 2019 government orders for PMF withdrawal from civilian areas, maintaining checkpoints that facilitated ongoing territorial control.[19] The militia's post-ISIS expansion involved economic consolidation in Nineveh, leveraging PMF privileges to influence land management and real estate. Reports indicate involvement in facilitating property sales and seizures, including support for Shabak militia claims on Christian-owned lands, which has contributed to demographic shifts by reducing Christian holdings in the region.[19][6] This control extended to trade routes in the Nineveh Plains, where PMF units under the brigade's umbrella exacted fees or bribes from merchants, enhancing economic leverage in formerly ISIS-held territories.[19] Subordinate units within the Babylon Brigade have incorporated significant numbers of Shia Muslim recruits from southern Iraq, diverging from its nominal Christian composition and affecting command structures with Shia-majority influences in operations.[1] This recruitment pattern supported the brigade's sustained presence and expansion beyond initial anti-ISIS roles, enabling patrols and checkpoint staffing in Christian enclaves despite local resistance, such as the failed takeover attempt of an NPU base in Qaraqosh on March 11, 2023.[1][6]Political Organization and Activities
Transition to Political Party
Following the territorial defeat of ISIS in Iraq by late 2017, the Babylon Brigades, having gained prominence through their integration into the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), pursued formal political institutionalization to capitalize on their battlefield legitimacy and advocate for Christian minority interests. This shift was driven by the need to secure representation in Iraq's quota system, which reserves five parliamentary seats for Christians, amid a fragmented political landscape dominated by Shia alliances.[4] In 2018, the group established the Babylon Movement as its dedicated political wing, registering it to enable participation in electoral processes and translate military networks into voting blocs, particularly in Nineveh Province and Christian-majority areas. The formation aligned with broader PMF strategies, where armed factions converted wartime popularity into partisan structures despite legal prohibitions on militias forming parties, allowing the movement to embed within Iraq's Shia Coordination Framework coalition.[9] The party's inaugural platform prioritized defending minority rights against extremism, facilitating reconstruction in ISIS-ravaged regions like the Nineveh Plains, and fostering integration into Iraq's federal system under PMF patronage, positioning it as a defender of Chaldean and Assyrian communities while navigating alliances with Iran-linked groups.[1] This approach aimed to leverage post-conflict security roles for legislative influence, though it drew scrutiny for blurring lines between paramilitary and civilian authority.[21]Electoral Participation and Successes
The Babylon Movement participated in the October 2021 Iraqi parliamentary elections, securing four of the five seats allocated under the Christian minority quota despite historically low voter turnout among Iraq's Christian population, which numbered around 200,000 eligible voters.[22][23] This outcome reflected the party's ability to mobilize votes beyond traditional Christian bases, including support from allied Shia electorates coordinated through informal networks.[24] In the December 2023 provincial elections, the Movement's alignments within the Shia Coordination Framework contributed to the Future Nineveh coalition's capture of 16 of 29 seats on the Nineveh Provincial Council, granting significant leverage over governance in the Nineveh Plains, a region with concentrated Christian communities comprising less than 5% of Iraq's population.[25][26] This positioning enabled the party to influence appointments and decisions affecting minority areas, amplifying its authority relative to its demographic weight.[27] These electoral gains underscored the Movement's strategic partnerships with Shia political entities, such as the Coordination Framework, which provided cross-sectarian backing and facilitated outsized representation in both national and local bodies.[24][26]Parliamentary Influence and Policy Positions
The Babylon Movement exerts influence in Iraq's Council of Representatives primarily through its dominance of the Christian minority quota seats, securing four out of five such positions in the 2021 parliamentary elections. These seats, distributed across provinces including Nineveh, Baghdad, Kirkuk, and Basra, enable the party to participate in legislative debates on security and minority affairs despite representing a faction criticized for relying on non-Christian voters from southern Shia communities to achieve electoral thresholds.[3][5] The Movement's parliamentary bloc has aligned with the Shia Coordination Framework, a coalition of Iran-influenced parties, to advance agendas prioritizing militia integration over broader sectarian balance.[28] A core policy focus involves advocating for the legalization and sustained funding of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), the state-sanctioned militia framework that encompasses the Babylon Brigade as its 30th Brigade. The party supported 2025 legislative efforts to enact a PMF integration law, which would grant the forces financial independence, access to state intelligence, and formal embedding within Iraq's security apparatus, measures opposed by the United States as entrenching Iran-aligned groups.[29][30] This stance reflects the Movement's interest in preserving PMF operational autonomy, as evidenced by its voting record alongside pro-PMF factions during debates on security laws that allocate billions in annual funding to militia units.[31] On domestic issues, the Movement has pushed for increased reconstruction funding directed to Nineveh Province, leveraging its quota seats to lobby for allocations benefiting PMF-controlled areas in the Nineveh Plains, where post-ISIS rebuilding has prioritized militia-secured sites over independent minority-led initiatives. It opposes expansions of Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) autonomy in disputed territories, aligning with central government positions to maintain Baghdad's oversight of Nineveh and resist Peshmerga influence, a stance rooted in PMF territorial gains during anti-ISIS operations.[32] Regarding minority quotas, the party defends the existing system of reserved seats as essential for Christian representation, though its success in capturing them has drawn accusations of undermining genuine community voices through vote-buying and judicial manipulations.[3] In foreign policy votes, the Babylon Movement consistently sides with pro-Iran parliamentary blocs, resisting resolutions condemning militia attacks on U.S. forces and opposing measures to curb Iranian influence in Iraq's security sector. This alignment manifests in support for anti-Western rhetoric and policies favoring the "Axis of Resistance," including opposition to sanctions on PMF units tied to Iran's Quds Force.[1][33] Such positions underscore the party's prioritization of militia empowerment over neutral minority advocacy, as noted in analyses of its legislative behavior.[2]Leadership and Internal Structure
Profile of Rayan al-Kildani
Rayan al-Kildani was born on September 3, 1989, to a Chaldean Catholic family originally from Alqosh in Iraq's Nineveh Governorate, later relocating to Baghdad.[34][35] As a young adult, he engaged in security-related activities in Baghdad amid rising sectarian violence following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, which displaced many Christian communities.[2] Amid the 2014 ISIS offensive that targeted religious minorities in northern Iraq, al-Kildani founded the Babylon Brigades in 2015 as a militia composed primarily of Chaldean and Assyrian Christians to defend ancestral lands in the Nineveh Plains.[16] He rose rapidly to command the group, integrating it into the Popular Mobilization Forces structure by 2016, where it participated in anti-ISIS operations such as the liberation of towns like Qaraqosh and Bartella.[1] Al-Kildani has cultivated a public image as a protector of Iraq's Christian minorities, frequently appearing in media to stress Iraqi national cohesion and the integration of minority militias within state institutions over purely sectarian divisions.[2] In July 2019, the U.S. Department of the Treasury designated him under the Global Magnitsky Act for alleged involvement in the persecution of religious minorities, including threats, intimidation, and violence against Yezidis and Christians in areas under his brigade's control.[36]Organizational Composition and Support Base
The Babylon Movement's leadership is predominantly Chaldean Christian, centered around founder and general secretary Rayan al-Kildani, a Chaldean from Baghdad who established the group in 2014 as the political arm of the 50th Brigade (Kataib Babiliyoun) within Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF).[1] Despite this ethnic profile at the top, the organization's rank-and-file composition includes significant recruitment from Shia Arab communities in southern Iraq, such as Basra and Najaf, which forms the bulk of its estimated 3,000-5,000 fighters and dilutes any exclusive claim to representing Christian minorities.[1] This mixed demographic reflects a pragmatic approach to building manpower amid the 2014-2017 fight against ISIS, prioritizing numbers over sectarian purity, though it has drawn criticism for undermining the brigade's marketed image as a defender of Iraq's indigenous Christians.[1] The movement's electoral support base extends beyond Iraq's Christian communities—numbering around 250,000 nationwide—to include alliances with Shia political factions and voters, facilitating disproportionate gains in minority-quota seats.[3] In the 2021 parliamentary elections, it secured four of the five seats reserved for Christians, attributed partly to vote-buying and mobilization of non-Christian supporters in quota districts, rather than organic backing from the Chaldean or Assyrian electorates.[22] Similarly, in the 2023 Nineveh provincial elections, the movement captured 16 of 29 council seats in a region with a Christian plurality but Shia minority, leveraging cross-sectarian pacts and PMF patronage networks to amplify influence.[37] This broader base enables the group to punch above its demographic weight, though it risks alienating core Christian constituents wary of Shia-dominated alignments.[3] Organizationally, the Babylon Movement operates with a decentralized structure integrating its PMF militia wing, political party apparatus, and economic enterprises, sustained by state allocations to the 50th Brigade estimated at several million dollars annually in salaries and stipends.[1] These funds, drawn from Iraq's national budget for PMF units formalized under the 2016 law, support recruitment and operations without reliance on external donors, while local branches handle community services and real estate holdings in disputed Nineveh Plains areas to entrench territorial control.[1] Such diversification bolsters resilience but has fueled accusations of using economic leverage to co-opt local support rather than foster genuine minority autonomy.[1]Relations with Christian Communities
Ties to Chaldean Catholics
Rayan al-Kildani, the founder and leader of the Babylon Movement, was born on September 3, 1989, in Alqosh to a Chaldean Catholic family, leveraging this heritage to appeal to Chaldean identity in Iraq.[38] The movement portrays itself as a defender of Chaldean Christians against Islamist extremism, particularly through its armed wing's role in combating ISIS since 2014, filling security vacuums in Chaldean-populated areas where state forces were absent.[1] This positioning resonates with some Chaldean communities disillusioned by the inefficacy of traditional Christian parties in providing tangible protection amid ongoing threats.[2] Grassroots support for the Babylon Movement among Chaldean Catholics has manifested in urban centers like Baghdad, home to a significant Chaldean diaspora, and southern Iraq, where the group offers armed security and social services not matched by ecclesiastical or secular alternatives.[39] In the 2021 Iraqi parliamentary elections, the movement secured four of the five quota seats reserved for minorities, drawing votes from Chaldean constituents who prioritized militia-backed stability over alignment with church-endorsed factions.[39] These ties reflect a segment of Chaldean laity viewing the group as a pragmatic bulwark, despite its integration into the Shia-dominated Popular Mobilization Forces.[5] The Babylon Movement's approach diverges from Vatican-influenced priorities of the Chaldean Patriarchate, emphasizing alliances with Shia political blocs for influence and resources over strict doctrinal or confessional isolation.[40] Al-Kildani has publicly invoked Chaldean heritage to justify such coalitions as essential for survival in Iraq's sectarian landscape, attracting support from Chaldeans who favor realpolitik responses to existential threats rather than appeals to international religious solidarity.[41] This stance has fostered localized loyalty among Chaldean families reliant on the movement's patronage networks, even as it strains relations with higher church authorities.[24]Interactions with Assyrian Groups
The Babylon Movement, led by Rayan al-Kildani, has positioned itself as a representative of Iraq's Chaldean-Syriac-Assyrian Christian communities, with al-Kildani—a Chaldean Catholic from Alqosh—publicly aligning the group with broader Assyrian heritage to appeal to pan-Assyrian sentiments in the Nineveh Plains.[42] However, this self-identification has sparked debates among Assyrian nationalists, who often view the movement as a Chaldean-Shia hybrid due to its integration into Iran-backed Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) structures and reliance on Shia Muslim recruits and voters, diluting ethnic Assyrian priorities in favor of sectarian alliances.[43] Critics argue that such ties undermine pan-Assyrian goals of cultural preservation and autonomy, portraying the group as an extension of Shia paramilitary influence rather than a genuine ethnic advocate.[44] Relations with established Assyrian parties, such as the Assyrian Democratic Movement (ADM), remain limited and marked by skepticism, with the ADM and other nationalist factions offering little endorsement amid accusations that the Babylon Movement hijacks minority quota seats intended for authentic Assyrian representation.[45] In the 2018 and 2021 Iraqi parliamentary elections, the movement secured multiple Christian quota seats in Nineveh Province, but these victories drew condemnation from Assyrian community leaders for alleged manipulation and failure to advance unified pan-Assyrian objectives like self-administration in ancestral lands.[5] Tensions escalated over quota allocation, as Assyrian parties contended that the Babylon Movement's Shia affiliations fragmented the vote and prioritized Baghdad's central control over decentralized ethnic governance.[46] Militarily, the Babylon Brigade participated in anti-ISIS operations in the Nineveh governorate, including the 2016–2017 Battle of Mosul, where it operated alongside other PMF units to reclaim territories like Tel Keppe from Islamic State control.[47] While this overlapped with efforts by Assyrian-oriented militias such as the Nineveh Plain Protection Units (NPU), no formal joint commands were established, and post-liberation frictions emerged over security control, including reported clashes in Qaraqosh in July 2017 and kidnappings of NPU personnel by Babylon forces in Baghdeda in March 2023.[48][44] These incidents underscored persistent disputes regarding representation and authority in Assyrian-majority areas, with Assyrian groups accusing the brigade of prioritizing PMF loyalty over community defense.[37]Conflicts with Church Hierarchies
The Babylon Movement has faced ongoing disputes with Chaldean Catholic Church authorities, primarily over control of church properties, endowments, and political authority in Iraq's Christian-majority areas. Chaldean Patriarch Louis Raphaël Sako has accused Movement leader Rayan al-Kildani of seeking to seize Christian lands and institutions in the Nineveh Plains, claiming these actions undermine ecclesiastical governance and displace returning displaced families post-ISIS.[49][50] Al-Kildani has reciprocated by alleging that Sako has mismanaged or sold off church assets without transparency, positioning the Movement as a defender of lay Christian interests against perceived hierarchical overreach.[49][51] Tensions escalated publicly in April 2023 when al-Kildani criticized Sako for inadequate support to Christians during the 2014 ISIS offensive, framing the patriarch's leadership as detached from community security needs.[51] By July 2023, these rebukes contributed to Iraqi President Abdul Latif Rashid revoking a 2013 decree recognizing Sako's patriarchal authority, prompting Sako's nine-month self-imposed exile from Baghdad amid claims of political orchestration by al-Kildani's allies.[24][26] The Movement denied direct involvement in the revocation or related media campaigns against Sako, asserting that such measures addressed legitimate grievances over church administrative failures rather than partisan interference.[24] Sako has further contended that the Movement's militia-linked structure interferes in ecclesiastical affairs, including by pressuring clergy and lay representatives to align with its political agenda, which he views as prioritizing militia control over spiritual independence.[52] In response, Movement spokespersons have rejected these charges as attempts by church elites to suppress grassroots Christian self-defense initiatives, emphasizing their role in filling security vacuums left by state and church inaction.[51] Ahead of Iraq's 2025 parliamentary elections, on October 9, Sako issued a direct warning to Chaldean, Syriac, and Assyrian voters against supporting the Babylon Movement or similar armed groups, arguing that their dominance in Christian parliamentary seats distorts representation and erodes alignment with core community interests like peaceful coexistence and institutional integrity.[53][54] The Movement countered by dismissing the statement as electoral meddling by unelected religious figures, while reiterating commitments to voter autonomy and protection of minority quotas without clerical veto.[24] These exchanges highlight a broader rift, with Sako advocating for church-led moral guidance in politics and the Movement defending secular political mobilization as essential for Christian survival in Iraq.[55]Controversies and Criticisms
Human Rights Allegations and US Sanctions
In July 2019, the United States Department of the Treasury designated Rayan al-Kildani, founder and leader of the Babylon Movement and commander of its affiliated 50th Brigade (also known as the Babylon Brigade), under Executive Order 13818 implementing the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act for being responsible for or complicit in serious human rights abuses.[36] The designation specifically cited al-Kildani's role in perpetrating torture, including a May 2018 video showing him cutting off the ear of a handcuffed detainee; systematic looting of homes in the town of Batnaya; illegal seizure and sale of agricultural land belonging to displaced persons; and intimidation, extortion, and harassment of women in the Nineveh Plains region.[36] These actions were described by the Treasury as obstructing the recovery of areas liberated from ISIS control and serving as the primary barrier to the return of internally displaced Christians to the Ninewa Plain.[36] Human rights monitors and reports have documented additional allegations of militia-led intimidation targeting rival Christian politicians, security forces, and civilians in Nineveh Province. For instance, in March 2023, members of the Babylon Brigade allegedly kidnapped seven Chaldean-Syriac-Assyrian personnel from the Nineveh Plain Protection Units (NPU) in Baghdede (Qaraqosh), an act framed as part of broader efforts to suppress competing minority protection groups.[44] The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has highlighted al-Kildani's continued involvement in such patterns of abuse, including appropriation of Christian properties, despite the sanctions.[56] Al-Kildani has denied the U.S. allegations of systematic human rights violations, dismissing them as politically motivated by international actors seeking to undermine Iraqi militias and attributing isolated incidents to the disorder of post-ISIS conflict zones.[50] The Babylon Movement has similarly rejected claims of organized abuses, asserting that its forces operated under wartime exigencies to secure minority areas and that accusations often stem from rival factions or external biases rather than verified evidence of policy-driven misconduct.[24]Accusations of Iranian Influence
The Babylon Brigade, the military arm of the Babylon Movement and formally the 50th Brigade within Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), has been repeatedly described by U.S.-based think tanks and Assyrian advocacy organizations as an Iran-backed entity designed to extend Tehran's influence into Christian-majority areas of northern Iraq.[57][37] Analysts point to its integration into the PMF structure, which includes multiple factions directly coordinated with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force (IRGC-QF), as evidence of operational alignment with Iranian strategic goals.[1][36] Accusations center on financial traces, with reports alleging that Iranian funding supported the movement's electoral expansions, such as securing four of five minority parliamentary seats reserved for Christians in 2021 through tactics including vote-buying in Nineveh Plains districts.[58] Leader Rayan al-Kildani's documented associations with Iran-aligned PMF groups, including Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq (led by Qais al-Khazali) and the Badr Organization, are cited as indicative of preferential coordination over independent Christian defense, potentially prioritizing the "Axis of Resistance" network—encompassing Hezbollah, Hamas, and other proxies—against broader Iraqi or minority autonomy.[57] The brigade's recruitment of predominantly Shia fighters from southern Iraq, rather than local Assyrians or Chaldeans, further fuels claims that it serves as a vehicle for "Christian-washing" Iranian expansion, masking sectarian proxies as minority protectors during and after the 2014–2017 anti-ISIS campaign.[1][59] Assyrian and Western critics, including Genocide Watch and the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, argue this alignment undermines Christian self-determination by subordinating local security to Tehran's geopolitical aims, such as countering U.S. influence and consolidating control over border regions near Syria and Iran.[37][57] The movement's origins, reportedly linked to Iranian-controlled militias like Kata'ib al-Imam Ali, reinforce perceptions of dependency, with al-Kildani expressing public support for Iran-backed regional actors as early as 2018.[44][42] These ties are contrasted with the brigade's nominal role in PMF anti-ISIS efforts, where Iranian logistical channels reportedly facilitated operations, though detractors emphasize that such support entrenched rather than liberated minority communities.[58]Claims of Electoral Manipulation and Corruption
The Babylon Movement, led by Rayan al-Kildani, secured four of the five parliamentary seats reserved for Iraqi Christians in the 2021 federal elections, a result attributed by critics to systematic vote manipulation rather than genuine support.[3] Allegations included the exploitation of the Popular Mobilization Forces' (PMF) federal structure and a corrupt judiciary to override opposition, enabling the movement to dominate outcomes in Christian quota districts despite its limited grassroots base among communities.[3] Ahead of the 2025 provincial elections, reports emerged of the Babylon Brigade— the movement's armed wing—planning to replicate these tactics in Nineveh Province's Christian-majority areas, including intimidation to collect voter cards and ensure disproportionate influence over local polling.[5][60] Such practices were said to involve militia pressure on voters in the Nineveh Plains, contrasting with official election results that have historically favored the movement's candidates.[60] Corruption claims intensified in September 2025 when Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission launched campaigns disqualifying opponents of al-Kildani, prompting accusations that the body was shielding the movement from probes into graft tied to electoral disputes.[61] Chaldean Patriarch Louis Raphael Sako publicly urged Christian voters to reject candidates linked to corruption, implicitly referencing al-Kildani's network amid concerns over proxy control in minority councils.[55] Despite these allegations, no convictions have resulted from Iraqi judicial processes, highlighting perceived impunity.[60]Land Disputes and Control Over Christian Areas
The Babylon Movement, operating through its affiliated 30th Brigade within the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), has engaged in territorial expansions in the Nineveh Plains, a historically Christian region, leading to disputes over administrative control and property ownership. In April 2025, the movement took over the administration of Baghdede (Qaraqosh), Iraq's largest Christian town, displacing local Christian officials and governance structures previously managed by indigenous communities.[62] This action included the removal of mayors and council members, prompting accusations of eroding Christian self-determination in areas reclaimed from ISIS control.[37][63] Conflicts with ecclesiastical authorities have centered on church-owned lands, with Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Cardinal Louis Raphael Sako threatening international lawsuits in 2023 against Rayan al-Kildani for alleged seizures and encroachments on properties held by the church for centuries.[64][50] Sako cited documented evidence of unauthorized takeovers, warning that such actions undermined the church's role in preserving Christian heritage amid post-conflict reconstruction.[65] These disputes highlight tensions between militia-led security provisions and traditional church stewardship of communal assets, including schools, monasteries, and agricultural holdings. Utilizing PMF mandates for security and reconstruction, the Babylon Brigade has asserted dominance over key economic sectors in Christian locales, such as construction contracts and checkpoint operations, which critics argue prioritize militia affiliates over local beneficiaries.[66] However, this control has fueled resentment among returning internally displaced persons (IDPs), estimated at over 100,000 Christians in the Nineveh Plains since 2014, who report barriers to reclaiming properties and restoring pre-ISIS demographics due to militia-enforced allocations favoring loyalists.[67][58] Protests in Baghdede on March 11, 2023, underscored this backlash, with locals decrying the militia's interference in municipal affairs and land restitution processes.[58] Such dynamics have perpetuated instability, as property records from Iraqi courts reveal ongoing litigation over disputed titles involving PMF-affiliated entities.[32]