Al-Sadr’s Ace Card
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
DIGG THIS
"You
have your democracy and we have our Islam. Now get out of our country."
~
Sayyid Muqtada al-Sadr
Although in
recent months Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has stunned the
West by insisting on a timetable for the withdrawal of US forces,
he remains if not the puppet leader the Bush Administration wanted,
little more than the Mayor of the Green Zone.
Iraq does not
actually have any viable government or leadership. Despite the false
illusion of growing stability as portrayed by American propaganda,
Baghdad remains one of the most dangerous cities in the world. Iraq
itself sits as a time bomb ready to fraction into at least three
distinct states, one Kurdish, one Sunni Arab and one Shi’ite Arab.
Of course this is nothing anyone who has followed the events in
Iraq does not know.
The presence
of US military forces provides the loose glue that appears to hold
the country together. But it’s all smoke and mirrors. The US occupation
is also the main element preventing Iraq from developing any
form of viable stability. It’s more like trying to reattach a severed
head with a band-aid for the TV cameras.
The Neocon
movement, the White House and John McCain continue with their idiotic
delusions of "victory" as if magically one day the people
of Iraq will lay down their arms and shower US troops with the flower
petals they so rudely neglected to provide after the fall of Saddam
Hussein. That’s as likely to happen as Brett Favre winning the Nobel
Peace Prize… or another Super Bowl ring.
Big
Oil has returned to Iraq. As such, let Big Oil deal with the
Iraqis as best they can. Certainly if both parties are making a
profit, without the presence of US forces gunking up the works,
the motivation to resist will fade away to a small handful of hotheads.
Is an Iraq
in a state of perpetual chaos, and thus totally incapable of any
military adventurism, the goal of a handful of paranoid Zionists?
If so, has the US been duped by our "friends" in Israel
into providing that "security barrier" free of charge
but at massive
US expense?
Is the US afraid
Iran will swoop into Iraq and steal the oil profits away… or the
"glory of victory?" Foolish paranoia. Iranians will be
no more welcomed as "liberators" than the US forces have
been. Iran may try to intervene under the guise of security, stability
or maintaining peace only to inherit the quagmire of dead troops
and bankruptcy.
Sorry Uncle
Scam, your adventure has been a total failure, just as has George
W. Bush’s Presidency and Nancy Pelosi’s mandate to impeach. The
huckster Ahmed
Chalabi was not crowned "president" of Iraq as originally
intended. Nouri al-Maliki has proven to show more backbone than
expected… or desired by the Bush kingmakers. "The surge"
is a complete illusion of order as Iraq could explode at the drop
of a falafel.
So who really
runs this country without a government called Iraq?
Silly question.
No one runs Iraq. Like Lebanon before it, Iraq runs Iraq. A more
apt question is who has the most power in Iraq? Now we’re getting
somewhere.
There is a
simple answer; Shi’ite cleric Sayyid Muqtada al-Sadr holds the keys
to power in Iraq. As the son of the popular Grand
Ayatollah Sadeq al-Sadr who was murdered… or martyred if you
prefer… along with other influential members of the al-Sadr clan
by Saddam Hussein, Muqtada
commands great respect amongst the Iraqi Shia. He is a link to Iraqi
dreams of liberation… yes liberation… from under the iron thumb
of the US-backed dictator Saddam Hussein… or the occupying US forces.
As the most popular man in Iraq he heads the largest and most powerful
militia, the Mahdi Army.
Dare I remind
Gentle Reader of the wording of the Second
Amendment of the US Constitution?
Amendment
II
A well-regulated
militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the
right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
Love him or
hate him, Muqtada al-Sadr commands a well regulated militia for
the very purpose of providing the security of a free state… free
from foreign occupation… the US.
A strict nationalist,
al-Sadr has far outsmarted the US leadership by simply refusing
to play their game. He has identified the opposition not as Sunni
insurgents, Kurds, other Shi’ite militias such as the Badr Brigade
or even official Iraqi security forces. Al-Sadr sees the enemy as
the US military occupiers. If there is relative calm in Baghdad
these days, it is thanks to al-Sadr’s cease-fire orders, not the
"surge."
During the
early days of the occupation the Mahdi
Army had been linked with the ethnic cleansing of Sunnis in
predominantly Shi’ite areas. They have put up fierce battles with
US and Iraqi forces. At times the US
military has considered the Mahdi Army as the biggest security
threat in Iraq over and above the Sunni al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia.
Hence they’ve earned a certain reputation for ruthlessness. However,
as al-Sadr’s control over the Mahdi Army as strengthened, the MA
has become more disciplined. Ethnic cleansing has dropped off.
On of Friday,
August 8th, Muqtada played
another ace card. With orders to the bulk of his Mahdi Army
to disarm he in essence instructed al-Maliki’s "government"
to stand tough on the issue of a timetable for US withdrawal. A
vague "time horizon" is a meaningless device to stall
for as long as possible. Muqtada, like al-Maliki and the vast majority
of Iraqis, wants the US out. A "time horizon" is unacceptable.
Of course,
Muqtada’s disarmament is all contingent upon such a timetable for
US withdrawal. Al-Sadr has been speaking softly but carries a big
stick. Behind his disarmament instruction lays a veiled threat
of much more violence. Just how ugly can the Mahdi Army make things
if al-Sadr chooses to release the hounds?
And what will
the disarmed members of the Mahdi Army do? According to Sadrist
spokesman cleric Mudhafar
al-Moussawi: "Weapons are to be exclusively in the hands
of one group, the resistance group," while another group called
Momahidoun is to focus on social, religious and community work.
Interesting.
Is Muqtada al-Sadr setting up an alternative government in Iraq?
It seems so. Are we seeing an evolution in Iraqi government towards
a system similar to the Iranian system where there is a popularly
elected but largely powerless political branch and a ruling religious
branch with Muqtada al-Sadr as the future Supreme Leader?
This may be
the inevitable outcome and it may not be a bad thing for the Iraqis.
Although, it is far from what the United States (regardless of who
is president) and Israel would consider "liberation" or
ideal to their interests.
It may also
be possible that with US withdrawal, Iraq will explode into a real
civil war that could easily continue into some distant "time
horizon" set by various warring factors in the manner of Lebanon’s
endless fighting. It would be prudent for the US to stay out of
such a conflict... for a change.
Nevertheless,
it would be wise for the US and al-Maliki’s government to set a
timetable for withdrawal now… like immediately, tomorrow. It will
have to be set eventually. The US can no longer afford a permanent
military occupation of Iraq. And "victory" is meaningless
rhetoric.
Al-Sadr
and al-Maliki may be willing to agree to such a timetable; however,
such gradual withdrawals often end up falling apart. One minor incident,
a Humvee getting blown up for example, and the timetable could be
turned over in a fit of rage. At other times gradual military withdrawals
are simply more illusions perpetrated upon an ignorant and gullible
public. The occupying forces could easily bring a token percentage
of troops home under a grand fanfare while keeping the bulk of their
forces ensconced in permanent military bases out of sight and ready
to deploy at the whim of a tin star decider.
The White House
and Pentagon could easily fool the American public and remain in
Iraq. It’s happened before. It could very easily happen again.
Sayyid Muqtada
al-Sadr has raised the ante, peace under his terms or possibly worse
days to come. It seems he holds all the cards. It’s time to fold
and get out of the game now… completely out.
August
11, 2008
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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