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Iraq: is Iran the real winner?
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Wed, 12/07/2005 - 05:18.
All sides continue to exhibit the utmost cynicism in the increasingly confused Iraq war. The anti-terrorist SITE Institute notes that the self-declared al-Qaeda in Iraq has issued a communique on the Nov. 28 assassination of Sheikh Ayad al-Izzi, a prominent Sunni parliamentary candidate with the Iraqi Islamic Party. According to SITE:
It is pretty hilariously ironic that al-Qaeda should be accusing others of attempting to foment civil war in Iraqeven if there is merit to the accusation. Then there was the mob attack on former prime minister (and current US-favored parliamentary candidate) Iyad Allawi Dec. 5 at the Imam Ali shrine in Najaf. Apparently hit in the head with a rock, and (he claimed) menaced with a pistol, Allawi insisted his attackers were foreign agents (by strong implication, Iranians). "I will cut my hands off if these people have anything to do with Najaf...or Iraq for that matter," he said. (Reuters) Is he really in that much denial about the degree to which Iraqi Shi'ites outside his westernized and technocratic cricles consider him a pawn of US imperialism? But the thinly-veiled Iran card is an obvious one. Retired Gen. Wesley Clark (ex-presidential candidate and NATO commander during the 1999 Yugoslavia campaign) writes in a New York Times op-ed Dec. 6:
Clark calls, unfortunately, for "staying the course"but with modifications, including a crackdown on Shi'ite militias in the south and a reform of the federalist constitution to restore power to the Sunni center.
Otherwise...
As we have argued before, the question of Iran's growing influence in Iraq will have to be dealt with by US imperialism one way or another. Traditionally, the Anglo-American strategy in Iraq has been to support a centralist Sunni-dominated regime in Baghdad, tactically tilting to the Shi'ites and Kurds at times when the regime has turned unreliable and needs to be destabilized. The longest such period has been since Desert Storm, of course. At the moment the US is betting on the secular, technocratic Shi'ite Allawi. It seems like a highly uncertain bet, on a figure with little popular credibility. When the US needs to tilt back to the Sunnis to humble Iranian ambitions, it may find a complete vaccuum of potential Sunni proxies or even tactical allies. And hence, the threatening deluge... See our last post on Iraq. |
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