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36
TOPICS: AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY
A Shiite
International?
There was more heavy fighting in Karbala early on Friday, after which the
city fell eerily quiet. By Friday night into early Saturday morning,
Mahdi Army militiamen had mysteriously ceased fighting, and the US had
withdrawn from sites like Mukhayyam mosque near the shrine of Imam Husain.
Meanwhile, Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr called on his followers to continue
to fight even if he is killed.
There were big demonstrations Friday throughout the Shiite world,
including Lebanon, Bahrain, Iran and Pakistan, against continued US fighting
in Karbala, a key holy city for Shiite Muslims.
Geo-strategically, this entire episode is a huge disaster. Some Americans may
feel it is unfair of Shiites to blame only the US for the fighting, when it is
Muqtada's militia that is firing from the shrines. But life is unfair. People
always mind what foreigners do to the symbols of their native identity more
than they mind what their own radicals do.
Al-Qaeda's declaration of war on the US was a ploy to turn Sunni Muslims,
especially hard liners like Wahhabis and Salafis, against America and recruit
them as foot soldiers. In 2002 and 2003, the Pentagon replied in part by
seeking Shiite allies. These included the Hazaras, who were part of the
Northern Alliance that defeated the Taliban in Afghanistan. They also included
the Iraqi Shiites, which the Department of Defense wooed as allies against
Saddam and the Baathists. In his unwise decision to try to get Muqtada al-Sadr
dead or alive and to send GIs into Shiite holy places with heavy firepower,
Bush is in the process of turning the Shiite world decisively against the US
and perhaps creating new centers of anti-American paramilitary action.
The demonstration
in Islamabad, Pakistan, was small, but there were anti-American sermons in
Shiite mosques throughout the country. Pakistan's population is 140 million or
so, and I estimate Shiites at 15%. If I'm right, that's 21 million angry South
Asians. Pakistani Shiites are afraid of al-Qaeda and its allies, like the
radical Sunni group, Sipah-i Sahabah (Army of the Prophet's Companions), who
assassinate Shiites for sport. They had been a support for Gen. Musharraf's
policy of turning against the Taliban and allying with the US. Now Bush's
attacks on Karbala and Najaf have begun deeply alienating them from the US.
Someone give Bush a copy of "How to Make Friends and Influence People," quick!
I have commented on the demonstration, 5000-strong, in Manama, Bahrain, below.
It produced a political casualty.
The king fired the Interior Minister and declared his opposition to what
the Americans are doing in Karbala and Najaf, as well as what the Israelis are
doing in Gaza. ' "We share the anger of our people over the oppression and
aggression taking place in Palestine and in the holy shrines (in Iraq). People
had a right to peaceful protests. We are investigating," the agency quoted the
king as saying. ' This is a formal, non-NATO American ally speaking! Bush is
even pushing his closest friends into dissociating themselves from him, at
least rhetorically.
The biggest demonstration was in Lebanon, called by the Hizbullah, perhaps
numbering in the tens of thousands. Lebanon's population is only 3 or 4
million, about 40% Shiite. I figure ten percent of Lebanese Shiites may have
come out for this rally!
The irony for me here is that I often give the Shiites of Lebanon as an
example of how radical Shiites can evolve into democratic, moderate ones. The
AMAL party was more or less a terrorist organization from an American point of
view in the early 1980s, but in the 1990s it became a middle class
parliamentary party and gave up its paramilitary. Its rival, Hizbullah, tended
to appeal to poor Shiites in the slums or peasant villagers in the South, and
it retained 5000 fighters in its paramilitary. It remained militant in order
to get the Israelis back out of Lebanon, in which it finally succeeded in 2000
(once Israelis steal your land, they don't usually give it back). Hizbullah
seemed on the way to evolving into a parliamentary party, as well (it hasn't
been involved in international terrorism for many years to my knowledge).
There is some danger of joint US and Israeli policies re-radicalizing Lebanese
Shiites, and making the more militant Hizbullah more popular than the sedate
AMAL. All you have to do is fire helicopter gunship missiles into civilian
crowds in Gaza and then bombard Karbala, and somehow it mysteriously angers a
lot of Lebanese Shiites.
In Iran, as well, of course US military action in the holy shrine cities is a
gift to the hardliners. The latter have long tried to paint the reformists who
want more democracy as traitors in cahoots with America to destroy Shiite
Islam and Iranian culture.
I said the other day I thought Bush was pushing Europe to the left with his
policies. I think he is at the same time pushing the Shiite world to the
radical Right, and I fear my grandchildren will still be reaping the whirlwind
that George W. Bush is sowing in the city of Imam Husain. I concluded in early
April that Bush had lost Iraq. He has by now lost the entire Muslim world.
End of the article.