Jordan to host religious leaders’ gathering on Iraq

AFP is reporting that Jordan will be hosting a gathering of Islamic religious leaders April 22, to discuss reconciliation in Iraq.
Actually, I’m going to be in Jordan April 17-21. I’ll be giving a lecture at the inauguration of a new U.N. University leadership institute there.
Convening this religious leaders’ gathering seems to me like a good move. (You can read my recent paper on “Religion and Violence” to see how I identified the important kinds of contribution that religious precepts, practices, and institutions can make to peacemaking.)
AFP quotes an official statement as saying that the gathering,

    will be attended by “a large number of key Iraqi religious leaders who represent the Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish Iraqis”…
    The conference will be placed under the patronage of King Abdullah II who will “join his voice to those of the Iraqi religious and tribal leaders in calling for an end to violence and religious tensions in Iraq.” [tribal leaders??? Well, I guess that’s a Hashemite thang… ~HC]
    It is expected to produce a statement signed by all the participants and indicating “that there is no religious legal basis for hostility and fighting among Shiites and Sunnis,” it said.
    “The tension and fighting underway in Iraq is taking cover behind religious and sectarian motives … which is not justified by our noble Muslim religion,” the statement said.
    Religious leaders from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Iran and Turkey, as well as from other Arab countries are also expected to attend.
    Participants are to include Sheikh Mohammed Sayyed Tantawi of the Cairo-based Al-Azhar, the highest authority in Sunni Islam, as well as Arab League secretary general Amr Mussa.

… And Adel makes three

Iraqi political chameleon Adel Abdul-Mahdi today joined his UIA colleagues Qasem Daoud and Jalaleddine al-Saghir in calling openly on Ibrahim Jaafari to withdraw his candidacy for the PM post.
So that makes three of the UIA’s 128 National Assembly members who have thus far succumbed to intense US/UK arm-twisting to come out openly against Jaafari.
It is now 51 days since Jaafari was nominated, Feb. 12. At this rate– one open UIA defection won every 17 days– it will take the US/UK outside agitators “only” a total of 1,105 days to win the open defections of the 65 UIA members required to overturn the Jaafari nomination.
And 51 of those days have already passed… So “only” a further 1,056 days will be required for Washington to win its goal of having a compliant PM nominated by the UIA.
Why, that’s less than three years! Surely the Iraqi people can see what’s good for them and wait those further years before they get a government?? (Very heavy irony alert there.)
… Yes, of course I realize that Jaafari only originally won his February nomination by a margin of one vote. But that’s not the point here. The UIA people who are speaking out openly now against his nomination are doing so expressly against the wishes of Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, whose few recent declarations on Iraqi political matters have all stressed the supreme need for his followers to maintain their political unity. That is why we haven’t seen a cascade of 63 UIA parliamentarians (those who voted against the Jaafari nomination back in February) all now streaming into the openly anti-Jaafari camp.
Once again, it seems to me, there is something about Ayatollah Sistani that the Americans just don’t get.
(And let’s face it, getting Adel Abdul-Mahdi to come out openly against Jaafari probably wasn’t terrifically difficult, since he has consistently been described by US officials as the person whom they would like to see in the PM post.)

Muqtada Sadr featured in Newsweek

At last an American MSM publication (other than JWN) seems to be starting to find the right way to approach the question of the continuing government-formation impasse in Iraq. Newsweek’s Rod Nordland has a mid-length piece in this week’s Newsweek titled Sadr Strikes. The subtitle is: Deadly Vision: U.S. forces once had the renegade cleric in their cross hairs. Now he’s too strong—and too popular—to confront.
And for good measure, alongside that article, they’re running this interview with Fatah al-Sheikh, described as “a trusted confidant of Moqtada al-Sadr and editor of the cleric’s personal newspaper, Ishraqat al-Sadr”.
Nordland is quite right to focus right now on the “kingmaking” role that Sadr now plays. He writes:

    The American military no longer talks about killing or capturing Sadr; in fact, they’re careful to not even point a finger of blame at him. Why not? In part because Iraq has become an unstable democracy, and Sadr has massive support where it counts—in the streets. He has also learned the art of crafting different messages for different audiences. Even while his black-clad militiamen struck at Sunni targets recently, Sadr took the moral high ground and appealed for calm. “It is one Islam and one Iraq,” he said.
    Sadr has joined the political process, with stunning results. The current prime minister, Ibrahim Jaafari, effectively owes his job to the renegade cleric. “Despite the fact that Sadr was not himself an elected official, he and his followers were able to play the role of ‘kingmaker’ within the Shiite coalition,” says Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Sadr’s group has 30 seats in the new assembly that was elected last December, but the Sadrist party is allied with a larger Shia coalition, the United Iraqi Alliance. With Sadr’s blessing, his followers cast the deciding vote making Jaafari the choice of the UIA for prime minister.

One of the refreshing things about the Nordland piece is that not once does he refer to SCIRI or its leader Abdul-Aziz Hakim as being “the most powerful force in Iraqi politics”, or the like. Indeed, he doesn’t mention either SCIRI or Hakim at all!
Boy, that makes a change, after all the pumping-up of SCIRI’s role we’ve heard from the US MSM over the past few months.
Here on JWN, I’ve been consistently noting the Sadrists’ success in the Dec. 15 election– back as long ago as this Jan. 1 post, this Jan. 20 post, and this Feb. 11 post. Or even this Dec. 22 post.
In all of those, I was leaning heavily on the detailed, expert work of the western world’s leading UIA-ologist, Reidar Visser, and also on my own other readings, gut feelings, and analysis… But meanwhile, Juan Cole and just about the whole of the US MSM have been continuing to parrot the description of SCIRI/Hakim as “the most powerful force in Iraq”, etc, etc….
All of which must have made it very difficult for anyone to understand why Zal Khalilzad was so unsuccessful in imposing his favored candidate (SCIRI’s Adel Abdul-Mahdi) on the rest of the UIA, as I noted here recently. In this early-February analysis, Visser provided his own best explanation for the misperceptions of western analysts, most of which he attributed to SCIRI’s fairly successful, west-oriented (or should I say occidented?) media operation…
But enough of my longstanding “Why doesn’t anyone listen to me and Reidar?” rant. What about Nordland’s piece?
Well, for starters, he’d have done well to have read or spoken to Reidar Visser about all this… a long time ago! As long ago as early February, Visser calculated that the Sadrists (pro-Muqtada plus Fadila flavors) accounted for a total of 45 seats— as opposed to SCIRI’s total of 29. (And as opposed to Nordland’s own figure of “30” seats for the Sadrist party in the new Assembly.)
And then, in much of the body of his piece, Nordland seems to be following the very standard, US-government-issue line that portrays Muqtada as only a violent and divisive troublemaker. For example, he writes of Muqtada’s behind-the-scenes role as the real power behind the Jaafari nomination that:

Continue reading “Muqtada Sadr featured in Newsweek”

Rice tries to sell the unsellable

As I noted earlier, these are fateful days in Iraq. Condi Rice, fresh from the embarrassment of the reception she got from the good people of Blackburn, Lancashire, flew to Baghdad with her friend Jack Straw to try a hands-on approach to subverting the results of last December’s election.
But what they are trying to sell to Iraqi politicians is, it seems to me, notably unsellable. Their basic pitch (in public) is, “If you Iraqis want to get rid of the occupation forces then you need to hurry up and form a government.” But Rice (and Straw, for what it’s worth) are still also apparently determined that Ibrahim Jaafari, the person duly nominated to the PM post by the largest bloc in the parliament, is “unacceptable” to the occupation forces. So they have been wheedling and doing goodness only knows what else to try to get as many Iraqi politicians as possible to come out publicly against the Jaafari nomination…
In recent days they won two breathlessly reported tactical victories, winning public statements from two political figures within the victorious UIA alliance who called for Jaafari to step down. The two are Qasim Daoud, the head of the small Movement of Iraqi Democrats (hat-tip to Reidar Visser, there) and Jalaleddine al-Saghir of SCIRI.
But here’s the thing. In insecurity-plagued, traumatized circumstances like those in which the Shiite (and most other) Iraqis are currently living, what would persuade any individual to go against the opinion that is still sustained by a majority of members of the community with which which he/she most closely identifies? I suppose it could be a judgment that working with (rather than against) the Americans at this point would be “good” for the general interest of the person’s community of identification– or, an expectation of professional, financial, or other forms of personal advancement…
But if the Americans are also, at the same time, saying that they want this Iraqi government formed so that the occupation forces can get out, then it strikes me it is going to be hard for them to attract any Iraqis– but most especially, any Shiite Iraqis– to their anti-Jaafari scheme for any but the basest of personal motives.
Everyone knows the Americans are currently the declining power inside Iraq… So why would any Iraqis seek to hitch their wagon to them? Unless it’s for the sake of that secret bank account in Switzerland, promises of Green Cards for all members of the extended family, etc etc…
While Rice and Straw were having their “newsmaking” sleepover visit to the Green Zone Sunday/Monday, they met a bunch of Iraqi pols, of course. Including, they held a notably frosty meeting with Jaafari himself. One person they didn’t meet with, but with whom they were evidently extremely eager to communicate while there, was Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.
This AFP report from Baghdad notes that,

    Both envoys praised Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the spiritual leader for much of the country’s majority Shiite community, for his aid in building a new Iraq, suggesting he could help break the political deadlock.
    “Without the remarkable spiritual guidance shown by his eminence, the Grand Ayatollah Sistani, this country for all its problems it now faces would not have in its hands the potential for a better future,” said Straw.

This slavering praise of Sistani came after President Bush early last week tried to send a letter and accompanying verbal message to Sistani– but, as that AP story from March 31 there noted, the letter sat “unread and untranslated” in Sistani’s office.
The unnamed Sistani aide quoted in that AP report,

    said the person who delivered the Bush letter – he would not identify the messenger by name or nationality – said it carried Bush’s thanks to al-Sistani for calling for calm among his followers in preventing the outbreak of civil war after a Shiite shrine was bombed late last month.
    The messenger also was said to have explained that the letter reinforced the American position that Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari should not be given a second term. Al-Sistani has not publicly taken sides in the dispute, but rather has called for Shiite unity.
    The United States was known to object to al-Jaafari’s second term but has never said so outright and in public.
    But on Saturday, U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad carried a similar letter from Bush to a meeting with Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, leader of the largest Shiite political organization, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq. [As noted here.]
    The al-Sistani aide said Shiite displeasure with U.S. involvement was so deep that dignitaries in the holy city of Najaf refused to meet Khalilzad on Wednesday during ceremonies commemorating the death of the Prophet Muhammad. The Afghan-born Khalilzad is a Sunni Muslim…

… So all in all, the occupying governments’ attempts at using “diplomatic strongarming” to get the Jaafari nomination withdrawn seem to have failed. What will they try next?

Destabilization in Iraq

Last weekend, Czar George tried to deliver a direct personal veto to Iraq’s dominant parliamentary bloc, the UIA, regarding its still-extant nomination of Daawa Party head Ibrahim Jaafari to be (remain as) Prime Minister. That apparently backfired.
Now, the US-backed plotters have managed to persuade a number of UIA personalities to come out publicly to back the call that Jaafari step down. That link takes you to an NYT article by Kirk Semple and Thom Shanker, in which they report that a UIA member identified as Kassim Daoud had told them he and a number of other UIA parliamentarians now want Jaafari to step down.
They wrote that Daoud,

    said a sense of responsibility to end the gridlock [!!] had compelled him to speak out.
    “We all hope that he will respond because we know that he is a statesman and he will take the country’s best interest into consideration,” Mr. Daoud, who would be a possible candidate for the post, said Saturday in a brief telephone interview.

A Jaafari aide, Jawad al-Maliki, said Jaafari had no intention of doing that.
This Reuters piece describes Daoud as “a senior member of the independent group within the Alliance”. Whatever that means. (Any more info about him would of course be very useful. Please send it in as a comment!)
This AFP piece also has a quote from Daoud along similar lines. The AFP reporter adds that,

    Saad Jawad Qandil, member of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), one of the key parties in the Shiite alliance, also confirmed that a number of alliance members were asking for Jaafari’s withdrawal.
    “There have been numerous calls from the members of the Iraqi Alliance, on an individual basis without being the view of the entire bloc, to change the current candidate of the alliance, Jaafari, to resolve the ongoing political crisis,” Qandil told AFP.

This is interesting and significant. Because although the main US-backed candidate for PM is SCIRI pol Adel Abdul-Mahdi, in recent days– until now– SCIRI spokesmen have been rejecting US intervention and expressing continued (if perhaps not terribly fervent) support for Jaafari.
As I noted in my March 29 post here, the US claim that there is an “impasse” in the Iraqi government-formation process is quite disingenuous, since it has been US meddling that has caused the impasse so far.
Also of note: that Ayatollah Muhammad al-Yacoubi has now openly entered the Iraqi political fray. Ed Wong of the NYT wrote in today’s paper that in his Friday sermon yesterday that Yacoubi– who is the head of the pro-Sadrist Fadilah Party– called for the Bush administration to replace Zal Khalilzad as US Ambassador in Iraq
Wong wrote that Yacoubi said,

    that if the Bush administration “wants to protect itself from more failure and collapse, it should change its ambassador in Iraq, honestly and seriously build strong national military forces able to secure the country, and end the claims to occupation that are the main source of the evolution of terrorism.”

Fateful days in Iraq, indeed.