U.S. and Iran find common ground in Iraq's Shiite conflict
By James Glanz and Alissa J. Rubin
Monday, April 21, 2008/International Herald Tribune.

at http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/04/21/mideast/shiite.php

BAGHDAD: In the Iraqi government's fight to subdue the Shiite militia
of Moktada al-Sadr in the southern city of Basra, perhaps nothing
reveals the complexities of the Iraq conflict more starkly than this:
Iran and the United States find themselves on the same side.

The causes of this convergence boil down to the logic of
self-interest, although it is logic in a place where even the most
basic reasoning refuses to proceed in a straight line. In essence,
though, the calculation by the United States is that it must back the
government it helped to create and take the steps needed to protect
U.S. troops and civilian officials.

Iranian motivations appear to hinge on the possibility that Sadr's
political and military followers could gain power in provincial
elections, now scheduled for this fall, and disrupt the creation of a
large semi-autonomous region in southern Iraq that the Iranians see as
beneficial.

The American-Iranian convergence is all the more remarkable because of
mutual animosity. The United States says that Iran has backed
thousands of attacks on U.S. troops in Iraq, bitterly opposes Iran's
nuclear program and has not ruled out military action if Iranian
policies do not change. Meanwhile, at the level of senior officialdom
at least, Iran takes quite seriously its depiction of the United
States as the planet's Great Satan.

But both sides are making nice on the issue of countering Sadr, one of
Iraq's most powerful Shiite clerics. As Iraqi government soldiers took
control of the last areas of Basra from Sadr's militia on Saturday,
concluding a monthlong effort, Iran's ambassador to Iraq, Hassan
Kazemi Qumi, took the unusual step of expressing strong support for
the government's position and described Sadr's fighters as outlaws.

When it comes to which Shiite bloc that Iran and the United States
want to see in power, at least for now they largely see Sadr's
ascendance as a common threat, and nowhere more so than in Basra, the
oil-rich capital of Iraq's most populous region, the Shiite south.

Although there are many groups in Iraq - Shiite and Sunni, Turkmen and
Kurd - it is a majority Shiite country and in the end the geopolitical
calculus has to do with what kind of Shiite government the United
States and Iran want in control here.

The party that both are backing, the Islamic Supreme Iraqi Council, a
bitter rival of Sadr's movement, has managed to play to the interests
of both countries. Under Iraq's Constitution, provinces can form
regions with considerable independence from Baghdad. The Supreme
Council advocates a large, semi-autonomous region in the south,
similar to Kurdistan in the north, comprising the nine southern
provinces. And because many of the council's leaders lived in exile in
Iran during the rule of Saddam Hussein, Iran has political ties to the
group.

Coupled with Iran's shared Shiite heritage, the prospect of such a
region would probably amplify Iran's influence over the oil-rich area.

The American backing of the Supreme Council comes in part because its
armed wing, called the Badr Organization, has never confronted U.S.
troops. As one American general said, "They aren't trying to kill us."
The same cannot be said of Sadr's militia, the Mahdi army, which the
United States believes is behind some of the deadliest attacks on
American troops.

Secondly, the Americans have treated the Supreme Council as an ally
from the beginning of the fight against Saddam Hussein, guaranteeing
its members safe passage when they returned from Iran and making them
charter members of Iraq's first governing body after the fall of
Saddam's regime. Since then, the United States has backed the Iraqi
government, which in turn relies on the Supreme Council to stay in
power in the country's parliamentary system.

But the position of the United States could have some damaging,
unintended consequences. It could push America further into the vortex
of an intra-Shiite political struggle and could lead to the creation
of a large, Iranian-influenced region in southern Iraq.

>From the point of view of Iraqis, the battle is in part a political
one over how the balance of power will change in upcoming elections.
The prize is control of provincial councils, which have significant
budgets, jobs and local power.

During the elections in 2005, in most southern provinces Sadr's
supporters did not vote, so that despite having grass-roots support
they were not represented on local governing bodies.

But the Supreme Council encouraged its followers to go to the polls,
and they dominated even in places where their supporters made up a
comparatively small percentage of the electorate. If Sadr's movement
participates in the next elections slated for October, they are sure
to do better than they did when they did not field candidates, and the
Supreme Council is likely to lose some of its power.

For instance, in the southern province of Dhi Qar, south of Najaf, the
Sadr movement fielded few candidates and did not vote in great numbers
in the 2005 election; the Supreme Council was able to dominate the
council and control the governorship.

In contrast, just to the southeast, in Maysan Province, where the Sadr
bloc did participate, they won the largest number of seats and took
control of the governorship. While Sadrists are unlikely to win
outright in many places, they are certain to gain influence and
potentially stymie efforts by the Supreme Council to encourage the
formation of a region and close ties with Iran.

Meanwhile, the political geometry that has landed the Americans and
Iranian on the same side of the Shiite conflict in southern Iraq
breaks down in the capital. The foremost example in Baghdad is Sadr
City, the dusty, impoverished enclave of more than 2 million Shiites
where Sadr has his base of power.

In battles there, Iraqi and American forces are trying to oust
essentially the same Mahdi fighters who were stalking the streets of
Basra.

But there is at least one crucial difference from Basra: In Sadr City,
U.S. troops are playing a much bigger role in the battle. For the
Iranians, who have consistently opposed the American presence here,
that difference comes with consequences.

Iran stridently opposes the operation against the Mahdi army in Sadr City.


-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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