Analysis: Iraq's Shiite power base shifts
BAGHDAD (AP) - Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim held together Iraq's biggest Shiite political party as the ultimate middleman: maintaining his deep ties with Iran and cultivating his new alliances of necessity with America.
His death Wednesday in Tehran now forces questions about whether any single figure can occupy the same tricky ground - or even still needs to - as U.S. military forces draw down and Iran is engulfed in its worst internal unrest since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
With parliamentary elections just five months away, the real struggle among Iraq's majority Shiites will have little regard for views in Washington or Tehran. It's about whether al-Hakim's son - young and untested - inherited enough political wits to keep the empire from splintering and potentially reordering the Shiite leadership constellation.
"It's going to be an uphill battle for him," said Mehrzad Boroujerdi, a researcher of political affairs at Syracuse University.
Any serious chips in al-Hakim's bloc, Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, could introduce new political voices in Iraq's Shiite heartland and possibly require some retooled policies by both the White House and Iran's theocracy.
But it also could open some new possibilities.
The soft-spoken, chain-smoking al-Hakim was widely viewed - even among some Shiite allies - as too cozy with Iran after calling it home for nearly two decades. His family maintained a political base in Tehran, returning to Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein in the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Al-Hakim even spoke Arabic with a touch of a Persian accent.
Al-Hakim was diagnosed with lung cancer in May 2007 after Vice President Dick Cheney, who visited Baghdad that month, arranged for him to be examined at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. However, al-Hakim chose to undergo treatment in Tehran, traveling there from time to time from Baghdad for chemotherapy.
If some Shiites worried about his leanings toward Iran, the criticism of al-Hakim was far stronger among the minority Sunnis. They denounced al-Hakim's support for Shiite self-rule in southern Iraq as a plot to hand Tehran control of Iraq's oil-rich south and accused al-Hakim of orchestrating attacks against Sunnis during the sectarian war.
Sunni groups will now be closely watching al-Hakim's 38-year-old son and successor, Ammar, for any potential offers of political reconciliation and pacts. The younger al-Hakim has been the de facto leader of the Supreme Council for months as his father withdrew from public duties as his lung cancer progressed.
Already some Sunni groups have forged political links with the Supreme Council, helping to expand its base and political reach before the elections.
But it's U.S. policy makers who could face the more difficult challenges in the potential shifts in Shiite politics, some analysts predict.
U.S. outreach to Shiites has been largely built around contacts with al-Hakim's faction and selected Shiite political leaders, including Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. This has created strong connections at the top of the Shiite political food chain - compared with the many tribal-level dealings with Sunnis opened as part of efforts to recruit anti-insurgent fighters.
It also leaves Washington more vulnerable during changes in the Shiite hierarchy.
"The U.S. policies have been based on reliance on the important (Shiite) power-wielders in Iraq," said the researcher Boroujerdi. "So now with Hakim out of the picture, one of those players is missing."
Iran, however, has far richer and deeper links to many different levels within the Supreme Council.
This could provide some advantages for Tehran to exert more influence if the Supreme Council begins to unravel in advance of the January election. Yet the turmoil in Iran after its disputed June 12 elections may keep the nation's focus more on its own problems than the politics next door.
Mike Knights, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, described the Iraqi Shiite views as double-edged: The major U.S. presence is a fact of the moment, and the big brother relationship with Shiite Iran next door is a fact of life.
But both Iran and the United States "are swimming in the same confusing waters" in Iraq, added Knights.
It could become a bit clearer in late September after the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. Few big political moves are expected until then. There's plenty of time, though, for back-channel deal making since Iraqi politics already was being shaken up.
Earlier this month, al-Maliki was left out of a new Shiite political alliance that joined the Supreme Council with a bloc loyal to anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who remains in Iran. The new group also includes some Sunni and secular groups.
The partnership was seen as an attempt to shore up and expand the Supreme Council political foundations after suffering embarrassing defeats in provincial elections in January. Al-Maliki, meanwhile, is looking to put together a new coalition that seeks build on strong showings in the provincial vote - seen as a rejection of the religious-based parties of al-Hakim and others.
The political stakes for al-Makiki appear to rising. His government is suddenly under pressure after being blamed for security lapses that allowed suicide truck bombers to strike the foreign and finance ministries on Aug. 19, killing about 100 people in the worst attack in Iraq's capital in more than 18 months.
MyWay
I wonder why no one ever talks about the other effect, how the Iraqi leaders close ties to Tehran give us a foot in that door? Maybe it's a secret.
His death Wednesday in Tehran now forces questions about whether any single figure can occupy the same tricky ground - or even still needs to - as U.S. military forces draw down and Iran is engulfed in its worst internal unrest since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
With parliamentary elections just five months away, the real struggle among Iraq's majority Shiites will have little regard for views in Washington or Tehran. It's about whether al-Hakim's son - young and untested - inherited enough political wits to keep the empire from splintering and potentially reordering the Shiite leadership constellation.
"It's going to be an uphill battle for him," said Mehrzad Boroujerdi, a researcher of political affairs at Syracuse University.
Any serious chips in al-Hakim's bloc, Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, could introduce new political voices in Iraq's Shiite heartland and possibly require some retooled policies by both the White House and Iran's theocracy.
But it also could open some new possibilities.
The soft-spoken, chain-smoking al-Hakim was widely viewed - even among some Shiite allies - as too cozy with Iran after calling it home for nearly two decades. His family maintained a political base in Tehran, returning to Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein in the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Al-Hakim even spoke Arabic with a touch of a Persian accent.
Al-Hakim was diagnosed with lung cancer in May 2007 after Vice President Dick Cheney, who visited Baghdad that month, arranged for him to be examined at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. However, al-Hakim chose to undergo treatment in Tehran, traveling there from time to time from Baghdad for chemotherapy.
If some Shiites worried about his leanings toward Iran, the criticism of al-Hakim was far stronger among the minority Sunnis. They denounced al-Hakim's support for Shiite self-rule in southern Iraq as a plot to hand Tehran control of Iraq's oil-rich south and accused al-Hakim of orchestrating attacks against Sunnis during the sectarian war.
Sunni groups will now be closely watching al-Hakim's 38-year-old son and successor, Ammar, for any potential offers of political reconciliation and pacts. The younger al-Hakim has been the de facto leader of the Supreme Council for months as his father withdrew from public duties as his lung cancer progressed.
Already some Sunni groups have forged political links with the Supreme Council, helping to expand its base and political reach before the elections.
But it's U.S. policy makers who could face the more difficult challenges in the potential shifts in Shiite politics, some analysts predict.
U.S. outreach to Shiites has been largely built around contacts with al-Hakim's faction and selected Shiite political leaders, including Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. This has created strong connections at the top of the Shiite political food chain - compared with the many tribal-level dealings with Sunnis opened as part of efforts to recruit anti-insurgent fighters.
It also leaves Washington more vulnerable during changes in the Shiite hierarchy.
"The U.S. policies have been based on reliance on the important (Shiite) power-wielders in Iraq," said the researcher Boroujerdi. "So now with Hakim out of the picture, one of those players is missing."
Iran, however, has far richer and deeper links to many different levels within the Supreme Council.
This could provide some advantages for Tehran to exert more influence if the Supreme Council begins to unravel in advance of the January election. Yet the turmoil in Iran after its disputed June 12 elections may keep the nation's focus more on its own problems than the politics next door.
Mike Knights, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, described the Iraqi Shiite views as double-edged: The major U.S. presence is a fact of the moment, and the big brother relationship with Shiite Iran next door is a fact of life.
But both Iran and the United States "are swimming in the same confusing waters" in Iraq, added Knights.
It could become a bit clearer in late September after the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. Few big political moves are expected until then. There's plenty of time, though, for back-channel deal making since Iraqi politics already was being shaken up.
Earlier this month, al-Maliki was left out of a new Shiite political alliance that joined the Supreme Council with a bloc loyal to anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who remains in Iran. The new group also includes some Sunni and secular groups.
The partnership was seen as an attempt to shore up and expand the Supreme Council political foundations after suffering embarrassing defeats in provincial elections in January. Al-Maliki, meanwhile, is looking to put together a new coalition that seeks build on strong showings in the provincial vote - seen as a rejection of the religious-based parties of al-Hakim and others.
The political stakes for al-Makiki appear to rising. His government is suddenly under pressure after being blamed for security lapses that allowed suicide truck bombers to strike the foreign and finance ministries on Aug. 19, killing about 100 people in the worst attack in Iraq's capital in more than 18 months.
MyWay
I wonder why no one ever talks about the other effect, how the Iraqi leaders close ties to Tehran give us a foot in that door? Maybe it's a secret.
18 Comments:
A foot in the door? The door is open, they are just waiting for O to send someone crawling in on hands and knees so O can retreat and declare 'peace in our time' and an 'end to our long national nightmare'. I expect that to happen by the end of the year, or he may save it for elections if things continue to go south for the dems. O is surrendering Iraq to Iran without pretending to care. We betrayed the Iranian dissidents in N Iraq in a way that reminded me of the Bay of Pigs and the Kurds will not be far behind.
Ted Kennedy has a foot in Hell. Maybe he will serve as a conduit to the Damned... )))
But, if you were saying Mad Tom that the Shia Butcher of Baghdad, al Hakim et al. served as a back channel to the Iranians, well you were right. But so what. It didn't stop the Iranians from flooding the country with weapons, agents and influence.
The US was conned by the Shia types like Chalabi who lied through their teeth with nonsense about a Democracy and secularism occurring.
Well, the INC con men told Bush what he wanted hear, I suppose. It takes two to tangle.
Gertrude Bell, 1920:
“I don't for a moment doubt that the final authority must be in the hands of the Sunnis, in spite of their numerical inferiority; otherwise you will have a mujtahid-run, theocratic state, which is the very devil.”
Gertrude Bell, Mad Tom, predicted the current Shia theocratic regime back in 1920.
How many weapons, agents or influence might we not have today inside Iran?
In Iran they are charging people with sedition and acting as a foreign power, you never know, it might be true....
And the Kurds have been fighting the Iranians for the last seven years, the boarder is constantly under attack, who knows how big a foothold we might not have there now...
And as too the issue of Iranian influence with the Iraqi shi'as, well what do you expect, if you look at it from the Iraqi point of view, everyone is against them, most of the west, the Russian and all of the Sunni world, they are surrounded with their back to the wall, all they have is Iranians for support, their very survival depends on them sucking up as much as they can from the Iranians..I would be doing just that if I were them.
I guess I just have a less pessimistic outlook, or maybe just a longer outlook. I don't see the situation as bad as some might make it seem. Not to say that we should worry and that is we just abandon Iraq they will fall, either to the Sunnis or the Iranians. Just look around the big oil is still blacklisting anyone wanting to make deals with the Shi'as, somehow no deal seems to go thru
And why is everyone so scared of a Shi'a takeover, I mean the Sunnis have not exactly been that great, so I say let the Shi'a have a try...
These people out lived saddam.
If it was up to me, I would send the local color guard to his funeral parade.
Insomnia induced blogging:
Is Obama Shi'a, or Sunni?
How many weapons, agents or influence might we not have today inside Iran?
Did you see the report about the Iranian dissident refugee camp in N Iraq that was turned over to Iraqi forces? How they beat hundreds and killed 6 because they didn't want the Iraqi forces entering without US forces? The video showed two US troops filming the incident, a refugee pleading for help, and the two soldiers climbing in a humvee and leaving the scene. Scenes of Rwanda and Bay of Pigs. If you think O is supporting dissidents in Iran or setting up for an overthrow, I don't think you get O at all. If the CIA had anything going on in Iran, I would bet it is on hold at least, awaiting Holder's review pending criminal charges.
"dissident refugee camp in N Iraq"
We've been getting rid of them for a long time, what are they still doing there, in Iraq, waiting for just the right moment...seven years latter...sure just like the bay of pigs.
Are you trying to piss me off?
I didn't say 'just like'. You did.
Similar to the Bay of Pigs in that one Administration used refugees from a former ally turned tyrannical state to spy, etc. then another admin is voted in and leaves those refugees and operatives at the mercy of the enemy because they have a different agenda. I would bet many of our Iraqi operatives have met a worse fate over the last 9 months inside Iraq. Similar to Rwanda in that we stand by and observe while helpless people are murdered in front of us when those people were trusting us to protect them because we are Americans and put ourselves in the position of being their protector. Were is the flaw in that observation and why would that piss you off?
Are we still talking about the MEK?
You'll have to remind me how great they were.
Oh before I forget, you mentioned the Video, sounded like footage of the recent attack, I haven't seen it, and likely some of the other readers have not seen it either.
Post a link.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZ9E8jS-hnk
For starters, a little video of American Humvees donated to the Iraqi Iranian cause, running over a few refugee problems. Of course, they may be ex or current MEK who came to this camp in an agreement with the US to abandon violent methods and with the understanding that they would receive protection and assistance from the US in return for Iranian intelligence. There are lots of other videos and news stories, some of them quoting Iranian reps as praising the correct actions of the Iraqis. Bush should have made arrangements for them and not expected O to stand by promises, especially knowing that O intends to suck up to Iran. But, this is just more of an established pattern of coddling enemies by serving up our allies. The Hmong could tell a thing or two about that.
strange video, the crowd acts as if they are playing soccer with the humvees? not sure what to make of it.
Youtube
Here's what I make of it and the other videos along with the news reports related to the incidents--- The US, having once again abandoned people that trusted us to do as promised, are being run over while we watch with military equipment we gave to those who are clearly positioning themselves to be allies of one of our most dangerous enemies. And it's hard to blame them, I mean why would they trust us as allies against Iran when we would betray and abandon Iranian dissidents? Best to go with the Iranian toadies. Sort of ironic, isn't it? Iran wants these people shot and run over, it's probably in Iraq's best interests to do just that, so they did.
And a trillion American dollars and thousands of lost and ruined lives to put some more tyrants in control.... so what? huh? One president naive enough to think Iraqis would know what to do with liberty is followed by a president who is naive enough to think that surrendering that very remote possibility to Iran will persuade them to abandon nuclear weapons.
"One president naive"
Yeah but what can we do now, we are going to move out of Iraq, how are we supposed to guarantee the MEK inside Iraq? The Iraqis have not shown much love for the saddam imports, look at the Palestinians, they got pushed out of their homes and shoved into death camps at the boarder, and they are getting help as refugees, the MEK was just on a terrorist list, and they are still there...So I don't know. Maybe Bush should have allowed immigration to those people, but...not sure what you would have anyone one do at this point. I mean if we are going to give anyone inside Iraq special protection, I think that should be the Kurds first, and them if there is any left over, we cold spread that around, but I don't even think we will really be able to do much for the Kurds unless we do a Berlin partition in Kurdistan....
The very least we could have done was slip them some supplies and light arms and turned our backs as they headed back to the mountain camps they left at our request. Now the Iraqis are starving them into submission and won't let them leave. And Bush should have taken them off the terrorist list long ago so they could have tried to immigrate elsewhere.
"The very least"
I will agree, I guess we could have, but we don't know if that has already been on the table...after getting some welfare, you know sometimes people don't just walk away voluntarily. You cant know, unless you do.
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