Kataib Hezbollah, an Iraqi armed group aligned with Iran, said on Tuesday that it will free U.S. journalist Shelly Kittleson and that she must depart Iraq immediately. Kittleson was abducted in late March in Baghdad.
Coverage of Kittleson in regional outlets described her as a U.S. freelance reporter based in Rome who has reported from multiple conflicts in the Middle East and contributed articles to Al-Monitor. On Tuesday, a social media channel connected to Kataib Hezbollah posted a video purporting to show Kittleson.
In the clip, a woman identifying herself as Shelly Kittleson stands against a plain background and speaks in English directly to the camera. Observers have not been able to verify independently whether the footage is authentic, nor confirm when or where it was filmed. Those verification gaps leave open questions about the immediate circumstances surrounding both the recording and the group's statement announcing her release.
Officials in Baghdad intensified efforts to secure Kittleson’s freedom in the days after her abduction, with pressure applied by the Iraqi government and several influential Shi'ite leaders on the militia, according to a government official with knowledge of the situation. That involvement of political and clerical figures is cited as a factor leading to the group's public announcement about releasing the journalist.
The group's declaration comes against a backdrop of at least one comparable incident in recent years. In March 2023, a graduate student with dual Israeli-Russian nationality from Princeton University, Elizabeth Tsurkov, was kidnapped by Kataib Hezbollah while on a research trip to Iraq. That individual was later released in 2025.
The sequence of events in this case remains subject to verification: the militia's statement that Kittleson must leave Iraq immediately, the emergence of the video, and the unconfirmed provenance of the footage. Authorities and observers will likely seek further confirmation of her status and the logistics of any release and departure.
Key points
- Kataib Hezbollah announced it will free U.S. journalist Shelly Kittleson and ordered her to leave Iraq immediately; she was abducted in late March in Baghdad.
- A video circulated by a social media outlet close to the militia shows a woman identifying herself as Kittleson, but the clip's authenticity, timing and location have not been independently verified.
- The Iraqi government and several influential Shi'ite leaders applied pressure on the militia, which officials say contributed to the group's announcement.
- Potentially impacted sectors include media (journalist safety and news operations), security and defense (militia activity and governmental response), and diplomatic relations (cross-border and political pressures).
Risks and uncertainties
- The authenticity of the video purporting to show Kittleson remains unverified, leaving uncertainty about whether the footage accurately reflects her condition or the circumstances.
- There is no independent confirmation of when or where the video was filmed, creating ambiguity around the timing of events and the immediacy of the claimed release.
- The announcement relies on the militia's statement and reported pressure from Iraqi officials and Shi'ite leaders; details of any formal transfer, safeguards for departure, or verification by impartial authorities are not provided.