The Mujahideen Army (
Arabic: جيش المجاهدين, Jaysh al-Mujahideen) was a
SunniIslamist rebel group formed in order to fight the
Syrian government and the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) during the
Syrian Civil War.[18] Originally a coalition of several Islamist rebel groups, it accused ISIL of disrupting "security and stability" in areas that had been captured from the Syrian government.[19] During its establishment in January 2014, the spokesperson of the coalition said it would start operations in
Idlib and
Aleppo and gradually expand towards the rest of Syria.[5] In December 2016, the Army of Mujahideen was briefly reorganized as Jabhat Ahl al-Sham (
Arabic: جبهة أهل الشام; Front of the People of the Levant), but this formation soon fell apart during
rebel infighting in January 2017.
Ideology
The Army of Mujahideen did not have a political program. Although the member groups have an Islamist identity, they were largely non-ideological
Free Syrian Army affiliated groups formed earlier in the Syrian Civil War.[20]
In March 2014, members of one of its component groups, the
Fastaqim Union, stopped
Marcell Shehwaro, a
Syrian Christian opposition activist, and demanded her to wear a
hijab. She
refused and was arrested, taken to a
Sharia court, and forced to sign an agreement pledging to wear the hijab. An Army of Mujahideen commander issued a statement apologizing for its fighters' violent actions, but the ruling requiring Shehwaro to wear a hijab still stood.[22]
On 4 May 2014, the Army of Mujahideen announced the withdrawal of the Nour al-Din al-Zanki Islamic Brigades from the coalition.[23] On 3 June 2014, the Army of Mujahideen announced the expulsion of Division 19's
Ansar Brigade and its leader, Abu Bakr, accusing them of theft and kidnapping.[24]
Charles Lister, of the
Brookings Doha Center, described the Army of Mujahideen as being a shadow of its former self by August 2014, partially due to a reduction in support it had received from foreign states.[25] Fastaqim Kama Umirt left the group around December 2014.[13]
In September 2014, the
United States began planning weapon supplies to the group,[26] and in the same month, fifty of the group's fighters were given military training in
Qatar and supplied with
BGM-71 TOW anti-tank missiles in a covert
CIA program.[27]
Several factions of the group, including the al-Noor Islamic Movement, the Amjad al-Islam Brigade, and the al-Quds Brigades left to join the Revolutionaries of the Levant Battalions in April 2015.[29]
In December 2016, the Army of Mujahideen re-merged with Thuwar al-Sham Battalion and the Banner of Islam Movement to form Jabhat Ahl al-Sham.[30]
On 23 January 2017, the
al-Nusra Front attacked Jabhat Ahl al-Sham bases in
Atarib and other towns in western Aleppo. All the bases were captured and by 24 January, the group was defeated and joined
Ahrar al-Sham.[15]
^"Facing Islamic State in Syria, U.S.-trained rebels await more help". Reuters. 1 December 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2015. The 50 fighters were the first from their group to attend the training in Qatar, part of an ostensibly covert CIA program to offer military support to vetted factions in opposition to President Bashar al-Assad