<http://www.juancole.com/2007/01/muqtada-al-sadr-and-sunnis-mickey-kaus.html>
Thursday, January 04, 2007

Muqtada al-Sadr and the Sunnis

Mickey Kaus of Kausfiles saw the Mehr report that I linked to
yesterday and inquired,

'[I was baffled] by how Sadr could be negotiating to form an alliance
with Sunnis at this point. It would be a big service to other
non-experts if you could explain how this is possible. . .'

I replied on the fly, but here is a slightly revised version, below. I
referred to the possibility of a Sadrist alliance with some Sunnis in
this post on Dec. 20.*

It is an abiding paradox of contemporary Iraq that the Mahdi Army and
the Sunni Arab guerrillas are slaughtering each other daily, but that
young Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr (the leader of the Mahdi Army) has
a better political relationship with Sunni Arab MPs and leaders than
any other Shiite.

During the first siege of Fallujah in late March and April of 2004,
Muqtada's Sadrists sent aid convoys to the besieged Sunnis there. In
spring of 2005, the Association of Muslim Scholars (hardline Sunni)
accused the Shiite Badr Corps paramilitary of having formed anti-Sunni
death squads inside the special police commando units of the Ministry
of the Interior. This open accusation caused a political crisis
between AMS and the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq,
the Shiite fundamentalist party that sponsors the Badr Corps. It was
Muqtada al-Sadr who engaged in shuttle diplomacy to calm the two
parties down. He could play this role because he had credibility with
both sides.

From his side, Muqtada makes a distinction between "Sunnis" on the one
hand, and "Saddamis" and "Nawasib" on the other. (Nawasib are those
Sunnis who have a violent hatred for the Shiites and the family of the
Prophet, and nowadays in Iraq "al-Qaeda" would be such a group in
Muqtada's eyes.)

So many Sunni fundamentalist MPs and officials of the Iraqi Accord
Front (some of them rooted in the Muslim Brotherhood) are acceptable
to Muqtada. He would argue that the Mahdi Army is not killing Sunnis,
only Saddamis and Nawasib.

From the Sunni Iraqi side it makes most sense to think of it in
negative terms. Most Sunni Arabs in Iraq now hate the United States
and Iran. Muqtada hates the United States and expresses resentment of
Persian dominance of Shiism. So if you think of them as Iraqi
nativists, they have a lot in common. If the fundamentalist Sunnis
could gain the Sadrists as allies, they would have a better chance of
getting rid of the Americans, their main goal in life. And, allying
with Shiite Islamists who are perceived as real Iraqis isn't so hard
for them.

The hardline Salafis in the mold of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and the
hardline neo-Baathists, both ethnically Sunni, reject this strategy of
talking to Muqtada.

In contrast, the National Dialogue Front led by secularist Salih
Mutlaq is said to be tight with Muqtada. Some elements of the Sunni
fundamentalist Iraqi Accord Front are also relatively friendly to him.
A politically connected Iraqi explained all this to me as though it
was the most natural thing in the world.

I agree that it is baffling. But it isn't just the Iranians who
perceive it this way.

Mickey kindly followed up:


'(Also, is there a possibility that if we leave a Sadr-Sunni alliance
could actually produce relative stability?)'

I replied,

About your last question, it is a really interesting one. It would
require a kind of mixture of Iraqi nationalism and pan-Islam.

You could argue that the Northern Alliance (i.e. the current
government) in Afghanistan pulled this off, with an alliance of the
Jami'at-i Islami (Afghanistan Muslim Brotherhood) and the Hazara
Shiites (the Vahdat Party was Khomeinist in the 80s and 90s).

But somehow I fear that the Iraqis as things now stand couldn't pull
this off, and that if the US left the Sadrists and the Sunni
fundamentalists would gradually fall on one another. Dislike of the US
presence is after all among the main things they have in common, and
that would be gone.

----

*I had written:

   ' It would also be possible for Muqtada and allies to put together
a significant bloc:

   Da`wa: 22
   Sadrists: 32
   Fadila: 15
   Salih Mutlak's list: 11
   Mishaan Juburi list: 3
   Part of the Iraqi Accord Front?: 10?

   Sadr could find enough deputies to block the formation of a new
government. '

posted by Juan @ 1/04/2007 06:30:00 AM

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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