- Source: Free Iraqi Army
- Negara Islam Irak dan Syam
- Mauthini (versi Ibrahim Tuqan)
- Bashar al-Assad
- Kebangkitan dunia Arab
- Intervensi militer Rusia dalam perang saudara Suriah
- Pertempuran Tikrit Kedua
- Daftar konflik bersenjata yang sedang berlangsung
- Kesaksian Nayirah
- Kudeta Suriah 1966
- Harry, Adipati Sussex
- Free Iraqi Army
- Islamic Army in Iraq
- Iraqi Ground Forces
- Revolutionary Commando Army
- Popular Army (Iraq)
- Free Syrian Army
- Syrian National Army
- Ba'athist Iraq
- General Military Council for Iraqi Revolutionaries
- Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order
The Free Iraqi Army (Arabic: الجيش العراقي الحر, Al-Jayš Al-‘Irāqī Al-Ḥurr, FIA) was an Iraqi rebel group formed in the western Sunni-majority provinces of Iraq from Iraqi supporters of the Free Syrian Army rebels fighting in the Syrian Civil War. The group aimed to overthrow the Shia-dominated government of Iraq, believing that they would gain support in this from Syria should the rebels be successful in overthrowing Bashar al-Assad. An Iraqi counterterror spokesman denied this, saying that the name is merely being used by al-Qaeda in Iraq to "attract the support of the Iraqi Sunnis by making use of the strife going on in Syria."
Aside from Anbar Province, the FIA reportedly had a presence in Fallujah, along the Syrian border near the town of Al-Qaim, and in Mosul in the north of Iraq. A recruiting commander for the group told a reporter from The Daily Star newspaper in Lebanon that the group was opposed to both Al-Qaeda in Iraq and their opponents in the Sahwa militia. The same commander claimed that the group received financial support from cross-border tribal extensions and Sunni sympathizers in the Persian gulf states of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.
On 4 February 2013, Wathiq al-Batat of the Shiite militant group Hezbollah in Iraq, announced the formation of the Mukhtar Army to fight against al-Qaeda and the Free Iraqi Army. In August 2014, the group became defunct, after a large offensive by ISIL in northern Iraq, with activity on their websites ceasing.
History
Links to al-Qaeda and the Iraqi Ba'athists
Despite the group's denial of links to al-Qaeda, the group had been accused of being affiliated with the group. These accusations of links with both al-Qaeda and the Ba'athists led to a Najaf Shiite figure associated with the State of Law Coalition issuing a fatwa against supplying the group with weapons.
See also
List of armed groups in the Iraqi Civil War
External links
Free Iraqi Army on YouTube