The Iraqi leader seeking a peaceful path to liberation 
A new party unites Shias, Sunnis, Kurds and Christians 

Jonathan Steele in Baghdad 
Friday July 16, 2004/The Guardian [U.K.]

While the latest damning reports on intelligence provoke new argument in
Britain and the US on whether the war made their countries and the world
safer, here the debate is different. 

Iraqis are not focused on whether things would be better had the
invasion not happened. What they want to know is how and when the
manifestly unsafe world they face every day - from kidnappings to
assassinations and car bombs - is going to change. They also constantly
argue whether the presence of foreign forces makes it better or worse. 

To seek an answer from a rarely reported Baghdad source, I went this
week to the northern suburb of Kadhimiya. Off a lane where market
traders push rickety handcarts towards the bazaar, steps lead into the
courtyard of a Shia religious school. 

Remove your shoes, and you are ushered into a mercifully cool room with
deep carpets and even deeper armchairs. Sheikh Jawad al-Khalisi and four
guests rise in friendly greeting. While many Iraqi clerics exude a
sanctimonious, mildly impatient air with foreigners despite their
elaborate expressions of welcome, Sheikh Khalisi has a look of genuine
attentiveness. He listens and discusses, rather than just declaims. 

His grandfather was a distinguished ayatollah who led the Shia
opposition to Britain's occupation 80 years ago. His father was a
learned imam. He himself spent 23 years in exile in Iran and Syria,
returning when Saddam was gone. Now he is general secretary of a new
movement that calls for an end to the occupation by peaceful means. The
media focus on violence, and the generally positive foreign coverage of
the efforts of Ayad Allawi's new government "to defeat the insurgency",
has created a false impression - that the government's opponents use
only force, and those who support peace support the government, and so
the occupation. 
 
Sheikh Khalisi's movement gives the lie to that. Set up a few weeks ago,
the National Foundation Congress brought about 450 Iraqis together at a
Baghdad hotel. They included Nasserites, leftists and Ba'athists from
the era before Saddam turned the party into a personal fiefdom, as well
as Kurds, Christians, representatives of the powerful Sunni movement the
Islamic Clerics' Association, which has close links with Falluja and
other strongly anti-American cities, and Sheikh Khalisi's own Shia
friends and colleagues. 

The movement picked a secretariat of 25, which meets twice a week. It
has decided not to take part in the government-supported national
conference, which is due to convene this month as part of the US
programme to set up a surrogate legislature. "We see no benefit in
institutions designed to implement American plans," says the sheikh. "If
the conference were to set a timetable for a US troop pull-out, it would
be worth it - but in the context of the occupation, the conference is
powerless and we don't want to disappoint our supporters. We will,
however, take part in the elections in January." 

The congress does not reject armed resistance, saying it is any people's
"national right", but it prefers peaceful politics. It supports the
restoration of the Iraqi army, criticises the formation of new militias
such as those of the radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, and wants the old
militias disbanded. It is also worried by Mr Allawi's draconian new
powers. 

"Iraqis are looking for security, and can be seduced by hope. Extreme
dictatorships are always formed in a context when nations seek
stability. It happened when the shah took power in Iran, with Ataturk in
Turkey, and Saddam Hussein here," Sheikh Khalisi said. 

Wamidh Nadhmi, a UK-trained political scientist at Baghdad university
and a veteran Arab nationalist, is the congress spokesman. Its
importance for him, as a lifelong secularist, is its bridge across
Iraq's numerous divides. "National unity cannot grow in a country that
emphasises sectarian divisions or expects ethnic strife," he told me in
the comfortable study of his house across the Tigris from Kadhimiya.
"There has to be reconciliation between Sunnis and Shias. We're not
interested in religion as such, but we feel that by bridging the gaps,
the ground will be better prepared for a national struggle." 

The real division in Iraq, he says, is not between Arab and Kurd, Sunni
and Shia, or secular and religious, but between "the pro-occupation camp
and the anti-occupation camp". In his view, "the pro-occupation people
are either completely affiliated to the US and Britain, in effect
puppets, or they saw no way to overthrow Saddam without occupation.
Let's agree not to indulge in slander but discuss the issue openly.
Unfortunately, the pro-occupation people tend not to distinguish between
resistance and terrorism, or between anti-occupation civil society and
those who use violence. They call us all Saddam remnants, reactionaries,
revenge-seekers, mercenaries, misguided, or foreigners". 

The congress is eager for the January elections. Under the system of
proportional representation worked out by the UN, every list should have
a chance. It needs only a declaration by 500 supporters to get on the
ballot. Iraq will be treated as a single constituency, so that every
27,000 votes will produce one seat in the 275-seat national assembly. 

The battle lines are becoming clearer. In Sunni districts, the Iraqi
Islamic party (banned under Saddam) has a virtual monopoly of
organisation. Shia parties say they will not even open offices there.
Among the Shias, where several groups operate, the current trend is to
produce a single list, according to Adil al-Adib, a senior member of
Dawa - the oldest and, according to the opinion polls, most popular
party. 

Rather than competing, each party prefers to get as many Shias into the
assembly as possible. Calling itself the Shia Family, "the list will
include Dawa, the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq
[Sciri], candidates supporting GrandAyatollah Ali al-Sistani, and maybe
people with Moqtada al-Sadr", Dr Abib says. It will provide a comeback
for the Pentagon favourite Ahmad Chalabi, who has been building links
with Shia clergy. "He is an enthusiastic defender of Shia rights. He'll
be on the list," Dr Adib told me. 

There are major faultlines. Dawa and the Sciri are in the current
government, which has no timetable for US withdrawal. Ayatollah Sistani
and Mr Sadr are critical. The Iraqi Islamic party is also in government,
but strongly linked to Sunni clerics who oppose the US presence. 

By making an early end to the occupation the top electoral issue, Sheikh
Khalisi's pan-Iraqi group hopes to be the catalyst. It deserves more
publicity and support. 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

------------------------
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] &  http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine

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