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http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/02/06/news/policy.html
Cheney Urges Calm on Islam's Role in Iraq

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http://www.juancole.com/

Monday, February 07, 2005
The Republicans' Iraq and the Islamic Republic of Iraq

The Republican Party spin machine was bouncing around the airwaves like an
overloaded washing machine on Sunday attempting to obscure from the
American public that they had by their actions managed to install a Shiite
religious ruling class in Iraq. The New York Times even lead with a
headline, "U.S. Officials Say a Theocratic Iraq Is Unlikely." This
headline is probably wrong, but in any case it begs the question of what a
"theocracy" is.

If it means a clerically-ruled state, then I agree with Vice President
Dick Cheney that a) you have to look at what Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani
wants, and b) that Sistani does not want clerics to rule the country as in
Iran. But the main goal of political Islam in the past few decades hasn't
been clerical rule. It has been the replacement of civil law with shariah
or Islamic canon law. This was done by the non-clerical government of
Sudan, e.g. And that is where Iraq is headed. The only question is how
wideranging the substitution will be. Will it just be personal status law
(marriage, divorce, inheritance, alimony, etc.), or will it be in
commercial law and other spheres of society?

Even as Cheney was pooh-poohing the notion of Iraqi theocracy, Sistani's
close colleague Grand Ayatollah Muhammad Ishaq al-Fayyad said, "We warn
officials against a separation of the state and religion." Then Sistani's
spokesman came out and said that the Grand Ayatollah Sistani "wants the
source of legislation to be Islam."

A lot of Americans believe whatever Cheney says, though I cannot for the
life of me understand why, since he lies to them relentlessly. He is the
one who tried to link Saddam and al-Qaeda operationally. He even once said
he knew exactly where Iraqi weapons of mass destruction were. Most people
will only remember that Cheney said there wouldn't be an Iraqi theocracy,
but won't bother to actually read the newspapers on Monday to see the news
I'm reporting below.

Although George Orwell/ Eric Blair wrote 1984 as an anarcho-syndicalist
socialist critique of Stalinism, it is becoming increasingly clear that it
was also prophetic about the direction of Late Capitalist societies
characterized by corporate media consolidation. In such a society, Cheney
can substitute himself for Sistani and speak for Sistani, erasing the real
Sistani just as the Republican pundits have erased the real Iraq.
"Ignorance is strength."

Another little-noticed development is how well followers of Muqtada
al-Sadr are doing in some provincial elections. They seem likely to
dominate Maysan Province in the south and to have a strong influence in
several others. The Sadrists are all about puritanism and implementing
Islamic law. A senior British official conceded, "We will have to live
with it."

At the national level, the Shiite religious parties have begun making it
clear that implementing Islamic law is among their highest priorities.

The four grand ayatollahs in Najaf are jointly called "the Source"
(al-marja`iyyah), i.e. the source of authority that must be blindly obeyed
(taqlid) on religious issues. Shaikh Ibrahim Ibrahimi, a representative of
Grand Ayatollah Muhammad Ishaq al-Fayyad, issued a suprise communique,
according to AFP. Al-Fayyad is originally from Afghanistan, but came to
Najaf at the age of ten many decades ago.

I was originally going to quote the AFP translation of the statement, but
found it wrong in a couple of places and have made my own:


        "All the clerics and the sources of authority, and most of the Muslim
Iraqi people, emphatically request the state and the national parliament
that Islam be, in the permanent Iraqi constitution, the sole source of
legislation in Iraq, and that any article or law be struck from the
permanent constitution if it contravenes Islam . . . [this matter] is
non-negotiable . . . [we warn against] changing the face of Iraq or
separating religion and state, for therein lie dangers that will bring
unfortunate results, which is rejected by all the clerics and high
religious authorities . . . [We warn against] the dangers of undertaking
derisory actions that hurt the feelings of Muslims, such as conscripting
Muslim girls and publishing their pictures with foreign military trainers
in magazines and daily newspapers . . . That has a negative influence on
the government, which stands, today, in the most urgent need of popular
support."


The four grand ayatollahs of Najaf may have internal disagreements, but it
is unlikely that al-Fayyad had this statement issued without getting a
consensus of the other three first.

AFP put in parenthetically:


        ' A source close to Sistani announced soon after the release of the
statement that the spiritual leader backed the demand. "The marja has
priorities concerning the formation of the government and the
constitution. It wants the source of legislation to be Islam," said the
source. '


Rod Nordland and Babak Dehghanpisheh of Newsweek have a fine profile of
Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani this week. The allegation they quote from
Hussein Shahristani, a Sistani spokesman, that the grand ayatollah wants
to be uninvolved in picking the new government, however, is probably
untrue. His views are being actively sought on who the new prime minister
should be.

Another AFP article adds concerning Sistani:


        " While Sistani is taking a harder line on the constitution, a source
close to him said he does not oppose a secular-led government. “He sees
no problem with a prime minister who is secular, because the current
phase means that it must be a politician with experience and this is not
taught in Koranic schools,” said the source. The source said Sistani
“does not want Iraq to be an Islamic republic like Iran because the
“velayat e-faqih’ is not an established tradition in this country.”
Velayat e-faqih was the ruling principle of the late Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, who led Iran’s Islamic revolution, and put clerics at the heart
of all decision-making."


The article goes on to speculate that Sistani will stay out of the process
of writing the constitution. I very much doubt that!

Let's listen to someone close to Sistani who would actually know about
this issue:


        ‘‘What he [Sistani] wants is influence over the constitution-writing
process,’’ said Mowaffak Rubaie, a prominent Shiite politician. ‘‘He
wants to be sure it’s done right.’’


So much for Mr. Cheney's fantasy of a non-intrusive Grand Ayatollah
unconcerned with politics who wants a separation of religion and state.
Cheney was only right that Sistani doesn't want to rule directly. Nothing
else he said on the subject is true!

Al-Hayat reports [Arabic link] that Adnan al-Zurfi, the American-appointed
governor of Najaf province, has issued a decree allowing the followers of
Muqtada al-Sadr to resume their Friday prayers at Kufa. The people of
nearby Najaf are afraid that this move may presage the return to their
city of Mahdi Army militiamen. Al-Zurfi's list lost in Najaf provincial
elections, and people are afraid that he is creating a poison pill for the
next provincial government, which is made up of religious Shiites.

The implementation of religious law could have a deleterious effect on
Iraqi women. Bush likes to parade Iraqi women at his official events,
trying to imply that he has rescued them from Arab male chauvinism. But
Bush is likely to have been responsible for the biggest roll-back of
women's rights in the Middle East since the 1979 Iranian Revolution.

A good sense of the differences between Sunnis and Shiites, and the likely
implication of the Shiite parties' win for Iraqis at home and abroad, is
presented by Steven Magagnini of the Sacramento Bee.

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