Why
Is the United States Picking a Fight with the Iraqi Shi'ite Community?
by
Kevin B. Zeese
by Kevin B. Zeese
Recent efforts
by President Bush to challenge the nomination of Prime Minister
Ibrahim Jafari and an attack by U.S. soldiers in Iraq on a Shi'ite
mosque has created great controversy in Iraq. Divisions between
the United States and Shi'ite leadership are growing at the same
time that U.S. rhetoric on the Shi'ite-dominated Iran are growing.
The U.S. mosque
raid resulted in the deaths of 21 unarmed worshippers and an imam,
most believed to be tied to Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. The
mosque was part of Shi'ite community center and shrine. The U.S.
reports at least 16 were dead and denies they were unarmed.
U.S.
News and World Report is reporting that: "The U.S.
military was trying to send a 'little reality jab' to radical Shi'ite
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr when American and Iraqi troops raided a Shi'ite
community center and shrine over the weekend, says a top U.S. military
official."
The raid has
been very controversial. The governor of Baghdad cut off cooperation
with the United States and Shi'ite politicians suspended their work
on forming a government. President Jalal Talabani demanded that
those "responsible" be punished and launched an investigation. While
the U.S. had been critical of Sadr at times, lately they have been
praising him because of his calls for calm in the wake of the bombing
of a Sunni mosque in Samarra that sparked a wave of sectarian violence.
General Peter
Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, responding to criticism
over the controversial raid, acknowledged
that the raid included a mosque but claims U.S. forces did not know
that until after the raid.
On March 29,
the
Los Angeles Times reported that the Bush administration
notified the leading Shi'ite Muslim alliance that it opposes the
nomination of Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari for another term in
office. Jafari is a Shi'ite religious scholar with close ties to
Iran. He has been criticized for allowing Shi'ite sectarian militias
to operate death squads within the police force.
On Saturday
U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad delivered a "personal message"
from President Bush to Abdelaziz Hakim, the Shi'ite alliance leader,
and asked that it be relayed to Jafari. The Los Angeles Times
reports that Shi'ite politician close to the prime minister, Haider
Abadi, said "It is not a friendly message. The ambassador is creating
an atmosphere of rejection against Dr. Jafari by saying the United
States cannot work with him. That only discourages the Sunnis and
other political factions from being open to compromise."
In
a rebuff to Bush, Iraq's supreme Shi'ite spiritual leader, Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani, was hand-delivered a letter earlier this week from
the president but it sits unread and untranslated in the top religious
figure's office. A key al-Sistani aide said the letter reinforced
the American position that Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari should
not be given a second term. Al-Sistani has not publicly taken sides
in the dispute, but rather has called for Shi'ite unity.
Further, the
al-Sistani aide said Shi'ite displeasure with U.S. involvement was
so deep that dignitaries in the holy city of Najaf refused to meet
Khalilzad on Wednesday during ceremonies commemorating the death
of the Prophet Muhammad. An American spokesman denied that Khalilzad
wanted to meet with them.
The attacks
on the Shi'ite community come at a time of escalating rhetoric about
Iran. Not only is the U.S. criticizing Iran for moving forward on
developing nuclear power but they are claiming that Iranian agents
are operating inside of Iraq. The commander of US forces in the
Middle East, General John Abizaid,
said this week "Inside Iraq, it is clear that Iranian intelligence
people, especially from the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, the Qods
Force people, are working with people that are at times working
against the government and certainly working against coalition forces,
especially in the south," but he went on to say it was not clear
whether this was being done with the Iranian government's approval.
Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice
joined in criticizing Iran, telling a Senate panel "I think
there's no doubt that Iran is the single biggest threat from a state
that we face" not only for the development of nuclear power,
but also, she claimed, bankrolling terrorism in Lebanon and the
Palestinian territories and repressing its people.
Growing divisions
with Shi'ite leaders, and with Iran which is Shi'ite dominated, may
be a prelude to new problems for the U.S. occupation. The primary
problem for the United States had been the Sunnis, adding Shi'ites
would certainly make the already challenging occupation even more
difficult.
April
4, 2006
Kevin
Zeese [send him mail]
is director of Democracy
Rising.
Copyright
2006 Kevin Zeese
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