Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Sadrists Pivotal Party, Vows Liberation of Iraq from Foreigners;
Tehran attempts to Broker Alliance

Al-Hayat reports in Arabic on the emergence of the Sadr Movement as the largest Shiite party within the Shiite fundamentalist coalition, the Iraqi National Alliance. The Free Independent (al-Ahrar) party that represented the Sadrists won 38 seats out of the 70 that the INA garnered, making the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, the Islamic Virtue Party and other Shiite religious components of the list much smaller and less weighty in the coalition's deliberations.

No sooner, the article says, than the election tallies began coming in did the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki begin gradually releasing Sadrist prisoners who had been in Iraqi penitentiaries for years. Al-Hayat's sources say that in Babil Province, orders were received from the government to release members of the Sadr Movement, in an attempt to mollify that group.

Sadrist leader Liqa' Al-Yasin said that the Sadrists have now become the spinal column of the Iraqi National Alliance. He said that the movement had demonstrated that it had a large public base, and asserted that that base is cultured, aware, and abiding by the principles both of Islamic Law and the Nation. Al-Yasin said that the Sadrists would work for the liberation of Iraq and the realization of national sovereignty. [Translation: they want US troops out of their country tout de suite.] He adds that other goals are to gain the release of prisoners and to take some of the burdens off the shoulders of ordinary citizens. Sadrist leaders said that "the next phase will concentrate on political action to end the Occupation altogether."

Another Sadrist leader said that the movement has foresworn violence and that they would not take up arms again save in situation of dire necessity.

Meanwhile,
al-Hayat is also reporting that a couple of days ago representatives of the Sadr Movement
and of al-Maliki's State of Law met in Tehran in an Iranian-backed attempt quickly to form a new Shiite-dominated government. In Iran for the talks were President Jalal Talibani and his Shiite vice president, Adil Abdel Mahdi of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq.

This move underlines the way in which Iraq's election has geopolitical as well as local significance. Also that Iran is sitting pretty while the US prepares to withdraw.



End/ (Not Continued)

3 Comments:

At 2:31 PM, Blogger Tao Dao Man said...

The day is approaching that Iraq will be an Islamic Republic.
The U.S. will have to prepare for that day.
Another pice to the puzzle is how do the Kurds play into this?
How much will the Saudi's want to influence the Iraqi Sunni population.

 
At 1:09 AM, Anonymous Thomas Ancrum Moore said...

Thank you Dr. Cole, without you we all would be guessing and hearing the predatory government's spin and outright lies... Too much at stake for them to even consider being straightforward... This looks to me like the endgame for the theft of Iraq.. What will become of the mega-mbbassy..?? Maybe air conditioned football

 
At 2:50 AM, Blogger leftside said...

What drama! America's guy (Allawi) miraculously wins, but is going to be fought tooth and nail. All the cards lie with the Kurds and Sadr. Do they choose nationalism and secularism or religious fundamentalism and sectarianism? If they diverge, it is likely Maliki will prevail.

Either way, someone is gonna be REAL pissed and their "democracy" is new enough there that an institutional crisis could easily turn violent again.

 

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