Ira Chernus PROFESSOR OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER |
NEW PIECES CHANGING THE
Trying to understand our war in
Here is the most recent piece. Ammar al-Hakim is a top figure in the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC), one of the two leading Shi'ite parties in the central government. Last week al-Hakim became the first major Shi’ite figure to visit Anbar province, where he met with and praised Sunni leaders.
That’s a new piece in the puzzle, but no one knows its
shape for sure, much less where it fits. The visit got virtually no coverage in
the
Pepe Escobar, the Asia Times
correspondent who is usually one step ahead of the journalistic pack, says
it’s a sign of a broad new Shi’ite - Sunni coalition emerging with one main goal: getting
all U.S. troops and bases out of Iraq. “The ultimate nightmare for White House/Pentagon
designs on
“Most interesting is that Ammar al-Hakim [on his visit to Anbar] was flanked by none other than feared Hadi al-Amri, the leader of the Badr Brigades - the SIIC militia trained by Iran's Revolutionary Guards, that in fact comprises the bulk of death squads involved in the avalanche of sectarian killings.”
But according to Hamza Hendawi
of the Associated Press,
there was someone else by al-Hakim’s side:
“As a sign of Washington's endorsement, Ammar
al-Hakim traveled on U.S. military helicopters, and a senior U.S. official,
Maj. Gen. Michael D. Barbero of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, attended the meeting.” Presumably
the Badr Brigades’ al-Amri flew on the
Why is the
Another AP article, published the day before Hendawi’s piece, claimed that the al-Hakim visit “struck a note of national unity in Anbar. … [It] was the latest sign that key Iraqi politicians may be working toward reconciliation independently of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government.”
The British Arabic newspaper Al-Quds
Al-Arabi (quoted on http://uruknet.info/?p=m37227&s1=h1Uruknet.info)
took a similar approach: “This
political activity is in the context of efforts to bring together the points of
view of the Sunni and Shiite groups in Iraq, in order to realize national
reconciliation and bring about agreement for the passage of a number of pieces
of legislation in Parliament, starting with the Law on Oil and Gas, and the one
on DeBathification in its revised form.”
That’s
just what
But there’s another piece that makes this puzzle look
rather different. Ammar al-Hakim is not exactly
an advocate of strong national government. In fact, he recently “called on
Iraqis to work for the creation of self-rule regions across the country. But
he cautioned that national unity must be maintained. The idea of breaking
up
Pepe Escobar agrees that al-Hakim is “in favor of
‘self-governing regions.’ That makes him for many Iraqis a partisan of ‘soft
partition’ –- just like [many] US congressmen.” Apparently the
Sunni leaders
are wary of the plan, according to these reports, but some are at least willing
to talk about it, as long as all the “self-governing regions” are created at
once. According to the
Arabic newspaper Al-Hayat (again quoted on Uruknet.info) al-Hakim’s meetings with Sunni leaders
“focused on the importance of declaring a federal [entity] in Sunni west
On the Shi’ite side, Muqtada al-Sadr and others have
rejected “soft partition” outright. According to Al-Hayat,
“Al-Hakim is trying, via
this encouraging the Sunnis to form their own region, to meet this resistance,
by leaving the Sadr movement, the Fadhila
party, the Dawa Party and other opponents, with no
alternative but to acquiesce in the reality,” which would leave al-Hakim and
his party at the top of the Iraqi political pyramid.
If
this isn’t all complicated enough, there is also the ever-elusive
The always acute Michael Schwartz thinks that the
So how do you put all the pieces together? Perhaps the
Or perhaps there are other pieces that we don’t yet
see, which would make the whole picture look very different. As always, we have
only a few pieces of the puzzle. We can’t know for sure what is going on. All
we know for sure is that hundreds of billions of our tax dollars are paying for
daily slaughter, and whatever aims our government may have now, they have
nothing to do with the best interests of the people of
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