Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Street Battles in Baghdad;
75 Bodies Found;
Diplomatic Ties with Syria Bruited


Al-Zaman reports in Arabic that on Monday running street battles erupted in several districts of Baghdad between guerrillas and Iraqi police. In Salikh, the Bank district, Sumer, and Tujjar, residents were forced to flee their homes lest they be exposed to kidnapping or caught in the cross-fire. The fighting, mainly with small arms fire, began when guerrillas attacked a police checkpoint. Police attempted to close off the affected neighborhoods. They also closed Salikh Bridge, which is among the main point of access to Baghdad from northern provinces such as Diyala, Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah. The closing created traffic jams and forced drivers to use an alternative route into the city.

The toll of killed and injured from this fighting was not known when reporters put al-Zaman to bed.

Reuters reports political and sectarian violence in Iraq for Monday.

Iraq and Syria agreed to reestablish diplomatic relations, for the first time since 1982. Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki was for a long time the Da'wa Party's bureau head in Damascus, in the 1980s and 1990s. Many Iraqi Shiites see the Syrian regime as Baathists and they will not forgive them for that. But al-Maliki's experience of being given refuge from Saddam by the Baathists in Damascus gives him a different point of view. My suspicion is that al-Maliki has been working on this rapprochement behind the scenes since he was elected to office. It is probably happening now because it coincides with the Baker commission recommendation that the Americans talk to Syria about stabilizing Iraq.

Although Washington is always accusing Syria of letting jihadis into Iraq, I'm unconvinced it is deliberately doing so. The Baath regime in Damascus is dominated by Shiite Alawis, a kind of local folk Shiism that doesn't have ayatollahs and accepts a sort of mythological way of thinking. The Baath regime's biggest enemy is Sunni fundamentalism. So the idea that Bashar al-Asad is deliberately building up a fundamentalist Sunni statelet right next door just strikes me as unlikely. The border is 800 miles long, and probably can't be controlled. If relations warm between Baghdad and Damascus, Syria may try even harder to round up the Sunni jihadis.

President Jalal Talibani will go to Tehran soon to consult with Iranian president Mahmud Ahmadinejad.

Canada.com / AP report that:


' In all. 25 Iraqis were killed Monday in a series of attacks in Baghdad. Ramadi and Baqouba. police said. The bodies of 75 Iraqis who had been kidnapped and tortured also were found on the streets of the capital. in Dujail to the north of Baghdad and in the Tigris River in southern Iraq. '


I was also sad to read that guerrillas shot and killed Fulayeh al-Ghurabi, a Shiite professor at Babil University.

At the Middle East Studies Association meeting in Boston, several Iraqi professors spoke on the horrible situation at the universities.

My Salon.com article, 'White Collar Crime,' on the rash of sectarian kidnappings in Iraq, is on the web.

Bill Gallagher, a Peabody Award-winning journalist, asks 'Who's Running the White House Now?'.

9 Comments:

At 2:02 AM, Blogger badger said...

For a coherent interpretation of where the Syrian involvement fits in the context of gradual American decline in the region, there is an interesting front-page piece in Al-Quds al-Arabi, which I summarize at my blog

 
At 6:46 AM, Blogger Jaraparilla said...

Iraq's Defence Minister has now declared a state of war, but the way he said it is quite ominous. From Al Jazeera:

We are in a state of war and in war all measures are permissible," Abd al-Qader Jassim, Iraq's defence minister, said on Monday.

So now even the White House can start calling it what it is: a civil war. And al-Maliki can play War Hero just like George.

That URL above also suggests many of the kidnapped education ministry hostages are still missing, despite government claims to the contrary. And it reports on the death of a comedian:

Walid Hassan, whose satirical television show made fun of the US-led forces, sectarian militias and the government, was shot three times in the head while on his way to work.

There was never much to laugh about in Bush's Iraq: now there is even less.

 
At 12:24 PM, Blogger misneach said...

Just a few weeks ago (with the bloodshed in Iraq pretty much on par with how it is now) I could hardly find any references on google to "Iraq Civil War" but found thousands that merely referred to the "security problem."

Now the reporting has finally begun to turn to match the realities of the situation, with "Iraq Civil War" turning out twice as many references as "Iraq Security Situation."

The Bill Gallagher article you have linked to is insightful, and as always your knowledge of the situation (specificially regarding syria and iraq) is helpful in understanding the broader situation.

 
At 3:19 PM, Blogger John Koch said...

Any JC comment on the McGovern - Polk "Way Out of War" essay or its related book?

http://www.harpers.org/TheWayOutOfWar.html

 
At 4:04 PM, Blogger Syrian Nationalist Party said...

SAN JOSE, California: Web sites that publish inflammatory information written by other parties cannot be sued for libel, the California Supreme Court has ruled.

The ruling late Monday was a victory for a San Diego woman who was sued by two doctors who had complained that she had posted a libelous e-mail on two Web sites.

Some of the Internet's biggest names, including Amazon.com, AOL, eBay, Google, Microsoft and Yahoo, took the defendant's side out of concern that a ruling against her would expose them to liability.

In reversing an appellate court's decision, the State Supreme Court ruled that the Communications Decency Act of 1996 provided broad immunity from defamation lawsuits for people who published information on the Internet that was gathered from another source.

link:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/11/21/business/libel.php

 
At 5:15 PM, Blogger Marion Delgado said...

I was disappointed that Juan, Helena Cobban and Joshua Landis were all at the Boston Middle East Studies Association Conference, hence nothing on the Gemayel assassination. You people and your pesky academic careers! :)

These conference presentations are semi-public, right? I'd love to hear what the conference on blogging produced.

 
At 10:11 PM, Blogger Jack Mitchell said...

Nice use of the verb "bruit."

 
At 10:55 PM, Blogger sherm said...

Adding to sand sceptic's proposal "Money and Bodies for the War" I suggest that those staffers and others in the Iraq brain trust be trained as combat medics before deployment, and be assigned to support high casualty operations. Don't just throw up a high rise in the Green Zone for them.

 
At 2:05 AM, Blogger Leila Abu-Saba said...

Reuben Apple: for hypertext in comments, just write out the code - I can't replicate it here.

Try this page: Basic HTML Codes for a simple example of the code you want.

 

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