Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Public opinion polls are valuable chips to play for those
engaged in a debate of national or international consequence. In the
end, however, they are abstract numbers. It is popular demonstrations
which give them substance, color, and -- above all -- wide media
exposure, and make them truly meaningful. This is particularly true
when such marches are peaceful and disciplined in a war-ravaged country
like Iraq.
This indeed was the case with the demonstration on
April 9 in Najaf. Over a million Iraqis, holding aloft thousands of
national flags, marched, chanting, "Yes, yes, Iraq/No, no, America" and
"No, no, American/Leave, leave occupier."
Tomgram: Hiro, Can Sadr and Sistani Handle Bush?
Mortar
attacks on the Green Zone, the American controlled and massively
fortified citadel in the heart of Baghdad, were already on the rise
when, late last week, a suicide bomber managed to penetrate the
Parliament building inside the Zone and kill at least one legislator,
while wounding others, in its cafeteria. Some parliamentary
representatives were soon declaring the still unfolding American
"surge" plan in the capital a dismal failure.
"'Someone
can walk into our parliament building with bombs. What security do we
have?' said Saleh al-Mutlaq, who heads the Sunni National Dialogue
Front in the Iraqi parliament.
"'The plan is 100% a failure.
It's a complete flop,' said Khalaf al-Ilyan, one of the three leaders
of the Iraqi Accordance Front, which holds 44 seats in parliament. 'The
explosion means that instability and lack of security has reached the
Green Zone.'"
In the meantime, while the Americans could
point to a drop in Iraqi civilian deaths in the capital (along with a
rise in American ones), overall Iraqi deaths throughout the country
were, not surprisingly, surging as guerrilla operations and sectarian
struggles simply shifted to places of less American strength. Baghdad
was hardly untouched though: a famous bridge across the Tigris River
was severed by a truck bomb last week, while a fierce battle against
Sunni insurgents was fought in central Baghdad, using helicopters.
Faced
with intensifying fighting, rising casualties, and chaos, the Bush
administration, which has resisted setting timetables of any sort in
Iraq, finally set one. In a Pentagon news briefing on Wednesday,
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates announced a set of "clear guidelines
that our commanders, troops and their families could understand and use
in determining how future rotations in support of the global war on
terror would affect them." Thanks to the thoughtful timetable-setting
of the Bush administration, Army families, who might previously have
hoped that their loved ones would come home at the end of a 12-month
tour of duty in Iraq, are now assured that they will definitively have
to wait another three months. This is certainly a sign of desperation
for the faltering all-volunteer military in a situation fewer and fewer
Americans would care to volunteer to be part of.
Although
administration-backing politicians like Senator John McCain and pundits
like David Brooks of the New York Times are urging that the surge plan
be given "a shot to play out" before being consigned to the dust heap
of history, the signs for the future in Iraq are grim indeed. Even in
the more peaceful Kurdish north, there are signs of trouble. General
Yasar Buyukanit, head of Turkey's military General Staff, raised the
incendiary possibility of Turkish cross-border military operations into
Iraqi Kurdistan to "crush" Kurdish rebels, causing a predictable storm
of response in Iraq. Meanwhile, a dangerous game of chicken is being
played out at the edge of some cliff by the Bush administration and its
Iranian counterparts -- with kidnapped Iranian
diplomats-cum-Revolutionary-Guards held somewhere in America's Iraqi
prison mini-gulag, those British sailors taken hostage by Iranian
Revolutionary Guards (and then freed), an American ex-FBI agent
mysteriously missing in Iran, and the report from Robert Fisk of the
British Independent that "the US military intends to place as many as
five mechanized brigades -- comprising about 40,000 men -- south and
east of Baghdad, at least three of them positioned between the capital
and the Iranian border. This would present Iran with a powerful -- and
potentially aggressive -- American military force close to its border
in the event of a US or Israeli military strike against its nuclear
facilities later this year."
And let's remember that all this
has happened without the majority Shiite population having truly
entered the Iraq War, which remains (however precariously) a struggle
largely against a Sunni minority insurgency. This may slowly be
changing as, in another desperately dangerous game of chicken, the
American military tries to peel away and take out parts of Shiite
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army -- elements of which were engaged
in street battles last week in Diwaniyah to the south of Baghdad, while
Sadr's followers peacefully protested for the end of the American
occupation of the country in a vast, over 8-mile long march in Najaf.
After
all these years, the Bush administration still seems not to grasp the
full dangers it faces, including, as Juan Cole long ago pointed out,
what might be called the Khomeini solution in which the majority Shiite
population would take to the streets, a development against which the
Americans could prove helpless. ("An urban insurgency/revolution," Cole
wrote back in 2004, "can in fact win, and win quite decisively, as the
urban crowds won out over the Shah [of Iran]. The Shah tried everything
to put down the urban crowds. He had them spied on. He had them shot
at. Nothing worked. The urban crowds just got bigger and bigger.") And
don't forget those endless supply lines from Kuwait, so crucial for the
American war-fighting and base system -- and so vulnerable.
Longtime
expert on the region, Dilip Hiro, whose latest book is Blood of the
Earth: The Battle for the World's Vanishing Oil Resources, offers a
much needed reminder of what the Bush administration is actually up
against in the highly publicized Muqtada al-Sadr and in a man who,
these days, gets very little print at all -- Grand Ayatollah Ali
Sistani against whose wishes, in crucial moments in the past, the
Americans have proven remarkably helpless. Tom
Sadr's Rising Star to Eclipse Bush's Surge?
Nightmare Scenarios for the Bush Administration
by Dilip Hiro
Public opinion polls are valuable chips to play for those
engaged in a debate of national or international consequence. In the
end, however, they are abstract numbers. It is popular demonstrations
which give them substance, color, and -- above all -- wide media
exposure, and make them truly meaningful. This is particularly true
when such marches are peaceful and disciplined in a war-ravaged country
like Iraq.
This indeed was the case with the demonstration on
April 9 in Najaf. Over a million Iraqis, holding aloft thousands of
national flags, marched, chanting, "Yes, yes, Iraq/No, no, America" and
"No, no, American/Leave, leave occupier."
The demonstrators
arrived from all over the country in response to a call by Muqtada
al-Sadr, a radical Shiite cleric, to demand an end to foreign
occupation on the fourth anniversary of the end of Baathist rule in
Baghdad.
Both the size of the demonstration and its
composition were unprecedented. "There are people here from all
different parties and sects," Hadhim al-Araji, Sadr's representative in
Baghdad's Kadhimiya district, told reporters. "We are all carrying the
national flag, a symbol of unity. And we are all united in calling for
the withdrawal of the Americans."
The presence of many senior
Sunni clerics at the head of the march, which started from Sadr's
mosque in Kufa, a nearby town, and the absence of any sectarian flags
or images in the parade, underlined the ecumenical nature of the
protest.
Crucially, the mammoth demonstration reflected the
view prevalent among Iraqi lawmakers. Last autumn, 170 of them in a
275-member Parliament, signed a motion, demanding to know the date of a
future American withdrawal. The discomfited government of Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki played a procedural trick by referring the
subject to a parliamentary committee, thereby buying time.
Opinion
polls conducted since then show three-quarters of Iraqi respondents
demanding the withdrawal of the Anglo-American troops within six to
twelve months.
What Makes Sadr Tick?
Though in his
early thirties and only a hojatalislam ("proof of Islam") -- one rank
below an ayatollah in the Shiite religious hierarchy -- Muqtada al-Sadr
has pursued a political strategy no other Iraqi politician can match.
The
sources of his ever-expanding appeal are: his pedigree, his fierce
nationalism, his shrewd sense of when to confront the occupying power
and when to lie low, and his adherence to the hierarchical order of the
Shiite sect, topped by a grand ayatollah -- at present 73-year-old Ali
Sistani -- whose opinion or decree must be accepted by all those below
him. (For his part, Sistani does not criticize any Shiite leader.)
Muqtada's
father, Grand Ayatollah Muhammad Sadiq al-Sadr, and two elder brothers
were assassinated outside a mosque in Najaf in February 1999 by the
henchmen of President Saddam Hussein. The Grand Ayatollah had defied
Saddam by issuing a religious decree calling on Shiites to attend
Friday prayers in mosques. The Iraqi dictator, paranoid about large
Shiite gatherings, feared these would suddenly turn violently
anti-regime.
Muqtada then went underground -- just as he did
recently in the face of the Bush administration's "surge" plan --
resurfacing only after the Baathist regime fell in April 2003; and
Saddam City, the vast slum of Baghdad, with nearly 2 million Shiite
residents, was renamed Sadr City. As the surviving son of the martyred
family of a grand ayatollah, Muqtada was lauded by most Shiites.
While
welcoming the demise of the Baathist regime, Sadr consistently opposed
the continuing occupation of his country by Anglo-American forces. When
Paul Bremer, the American viceroy in Iraq, banned his magazine Al Hawza
al Natiqa ("The Vocal Seminary") in April 2004 and American soldiers
fired on his followers protesting peacefully against the publication's
closure, Sadr called for "armed resistance" to the occupiers.
Uprisings
spread from Sadr City to the southern Iraqi holy cities of Najaf and
Karbala as well as four other cities to the south. More than 540
civilians died in the resulting battles and skirmishes. Since the
American forces were then also battling Sunni insurgents in Falluja,
Bremer let the ban on the magazine lapse and dropped his plan to arrest
Sadr.
Later, Sadr fell in line with the wishes of Grand
Ayatollah Ali Sistani to see all Shiite religious groups gather under
one umbrella to contest the upcoming parliamentary election. His
faction allied with two other Shiite religious parties -- the Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and Al Daawa al
Islamiya (the Islamic Call) -- to form the United Iraqi Alliance (UIA).
By so doing, in the face of American hostility, Sadr gave
protective political cover to his faction and its armed wing, called
the Mahdi Army. (U.S. officials in Baghdad and Washington have long
viewed Sadr and his militia as the greatest threat to American
interests in Iraq.) Of the 38 ministers in Maliki's cabinet, six belong
to the Sadrist group.
When the Pentagon mounted its latest
security plan for Baghdad on February 13 -- aiming to crush both the
Sunni insurgents and Shiite militias -- Sadr considered discretion the
better part of valor. He ordered his Mahdi militiamen to get off the
streets and hide their weapons. For the moment, they were not to resist
American forays into Shiite neighborhoods. He then went incommunicado.
Muqtada's
decision to avoid bloodshed won plaudits not only from Iraqi
politicians but also, discreetly, from Sistani, who decries violence,
and whose commitment to bringing about the end of the foreign
occupation of Iraq is as strong as Sadr's -- albeit not as vocal.
In
a message to the nation, on the eve of the fourth anniversary of the
demise of Saddam's Baathist regime, Sadr coupled his order to the Mahdi
fighters to intensify their campaign to expel the Anglo-American troops
with a call to the Iraqi security forces to join the struggle to defeat
"the arch enemy -- America." He urged them to cease targeting Iraqis
and direct their anger at the occupiers.
It was the Mahdi Army
-- controlling the shrine of Imam Ali, the founder of Shiite Islam, in
the holy city of Najaf -- that battled the American troops to a
standstill in August 2004. The impasse lasted a fortnight, during which
large parts of Najaf's old city were reduced to rubble, with the
government of the U.S.-appointed Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, favorite
Iraqi exile of the CIA and the State Department as well as leader of
the exiled Iraqi National Accord, failing to defuse it.
By
contrast, it took Sistani -- freshly back in Najaf, his home base, from
London after eye surgery -- a single session with Sadr over dinner to
resolve the crisis. A compromise emerged. The Mahdi army ceded control
of the holy shrine not to the Americans or their Iraqi cohorts but to
Sistani's representatives, and both Mahdi militiamen and U.S. troops
left the city.
The Towering Sistani
Ali Sistani
established his nationalist credentials early on. As the invading
American forces neared Najaf on March 25, 2003, he issued a religious
decree requiring all Muslims to resist the invading "infidel" troops.
Once the Anglo-American forces occupied Iraq, he adamantly refused to
meet American or British officials or their emissaries, and continues
to do so to this day.
In January 2004, when Washington favored
appointing a hand-picked body of Iraqis, guided by American experts, to
draft the Iraqi constitution along secular, democratic, and capitalist
lines, Sistani decided to act. He called on the faithful to demonstrate
for an elected Parliament, which would then be charged with drafting
the constitution and he succeeded.
Sistani then issued a
religious decree calling on the faithful to participate in the vote to
create a representative assembly committed to achieving the exit of
foreign troops through peaceful means. The Bush White House, however,
exploited Sistani's move as part of its own "democracy promotion"
campaign in Iraq, with Iraqi fingers dipped in inedible purple ink
becoming its much flaunted "democracy symbol."
When Allawi
began dithering about holding the vote for an interim parliament by
January 2005, as stipulated by United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1546, Sistani warned that he would call for popular
non-cooperation with the occupying powers if it was not held on time.
In the elections that followed, the United Iraqi Alliance -- the
brain-child of Sistani -- emerged as the majority group and thus the
leading designer of the new constitution. Respecting Sistani's views,
the Iraqi constitution stipulated that Sharia (Islamic law) was to be
the principal source of Iraqi legislation and that no law would be
passed that violated the undisputed tenets of Islam.
In the
December 2005 parliamentary general election under the new
constitution, the UIA became the largest group, a mere 10 seats short
of a majority. Though Ibrahim Jaafari of Al Daawa won the contest for
UIA leadership by one vote, he was rejected as prime minister by the
Kurdish parties, holding the parliament's swing votes, as well as by
Washington and London. A crisis paralyzed the government. Once again,
Sistani's intercession defused a crisis. He persuaded Jaafari to step
down.
Jaafari's successor, Maliki, is as reverential toward
Sistani as other Shiite leaders. For instance, in December 2006, when
American officials reportedly urged Maliki to postpone Saddam Hussein's
execution until after the religious holiday of Eid Al Adha (the
Festival of Sacrifice), Maliki turned to Sistani. The Grand Ayatollah
favored an immediate execution. And so it came to pass.
Sistani's
next blow fell on the Bush administration earlier this month. He let be
known his disapproval of Washington-backed legislation to allow
thousands of former Baath Party members to resume their public service
positions. That undermined one of the White House's pet projects in
Iraq -- an attempt to entice into the political mainstream part of the
alienated Sunni minority that is at the heart of the Iraqi insurgency.
In
sum, while refraining from participating in everyday politics, Sistani
intervenes on the issues of paramount importance to the Iraqi people,
as he sees them. Western journalists, who routinely describe him as
belonging to the "quietist school" of Shiite Islam (at odds with the
"interventionist school"), are therefore off the mark. Given Sistani's
uncompromising opposition to the presence of foreign troops in Iraq,
his staunch nationalism, and the unmatched reverence that he evokes,
particularly among the majority Shiites, he poses a greater long-term
threat to Washington's interests in Iraq than Muqtada al-Sadr; and, far
from belonging to opposite schools of Shiite Islam, Sadr and Sistani,
both staunch nationalists, complement each other -- much to the puzzled
frustration of the Bush White House.
What must worry
Washington more than the massive size of the demonstration on April 9
was its mixed Shiite-Sunni composition and nationalistic ambience. The
prospect of Sadr's appeal extending to a section of the Sunni
community, with the tacit support of Sistani, is the nightmare scenario
that the Bush administration most dreads. Yet it may come to pass.
Dilip Hiro
is the author of Secrets and Lies: "Operation Iraqi Freedom" and After
and, most recently, Blood of the Earth: The Battle for the World's
Vanishing Oil Resources (Nation Books).