Washington doesn't show a slightest hint of withdrawal from Iraq or
detente with Tehran or Damascus.  Tehran sponsors a radioactive
Holocaust revisionist conference, a dirty ideological bomb that it
might have meant to hurl at Israel and the West but that can only
explode in the face of the Iranian and Palestinian peoples, and Ehud
Olmert unexpectedly goes public in Germany about Tel Aviv's possession
of nuclear weapons, which is probably not so much a slip as a threat
(to Iran) and a goad (to Europe and the USA).  Fateh and Hamas are
shooting at each other.  After the US-backed "Cedar Revolution" and
the Israeli invasion, Lebanon is locked into a contest for power
between the US-backed March 14 coalition and the Hizballah-led
coalition allied with Tehran and Damascus.  Meanwhile, Riyadh declares
its plan to officially back Sunnis in Iraq -- money from private Saudi
sources has been already flowing anyway.  And, as soon as Saudi
clerics issue a call for an anti-Shia jihad in Iraq, another truck
bomb blows up a crowd of Shi'is.

<blockquote>A truck loaded with bags of wheat drove up to a crowd of
poor Shiites early Tuesday, lured them close with a promise of work
and exploded as they gathered around. Seventy were killed and 236 were
wounded, officials said.

The attack, in a square in central Baghdad, together with corpses
found by Iraqi authorities, pushed the day's death toll across Iraq to
at least 131, the highest total since a bombing killed more than 200
here last month. Shiite political leaders often point to such attacks,
arguing that they, not the American military, should control security
here.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

On Monday, more than 30 prominent Islamic clerics from Saudi Arabia
called on Sunni Muslims around the Middle East to support Sunnis in
Iraq against Shiites, The Associated Press reported. The clerics, most
of them from Saudi Arabia's top Islamic universities, the centers of
hard-line Islam, posted their statement posted on a Saudi news
Internet site.

"After almost four years of occupation, it is clear that the aim
behind this occupation is for the Crusaders and Shiites to take
control of Iraq, paving the way to complete their control over the
region," the statement read, according to The A.P.  (Sabrina
Tavernise, "Truck Bomb in Iraq Kills 70 in Shiite Crowd," 12 December
2006)</blockquote>

The Taliban have come back in Afghanistan, and Hamid Karzai is now
openly accusing Islamabad of financing the Taliban restoration, in an
ominous language:

<blockquote>"Afghanistan either has to be fixed and be peaceful, or
the whole region will run into hell with us," Mr. Karzai told a small
group of journalists during a visit to this southern city, his
hometown, which has been reeling from almost daily suicide bombings in
the last 10 days. "It's not going to be like the past, that only we
suffer. Those who cause us to suffer will burn in hell with us. And I
hope NATO recognizes this."  (Carlotta Gall, "Pakistan's Support for
Militants Threatens Region, Karzai Says," 13 December 2006,
<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/world/asia/13afghan.html>)</blockquote>

One might think that Washington is too busy with Iraq and Afghanistan
to seriously meddle elsewhere, but, no, it's vigorously backing
Ethiopia's war with Islamists in Somalia:

<blockquote><http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/world/africa/14somalia.html>
December 14, 2006
Somalia's Islamists and Ethiopia Gird for a War
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN and MARK MAZZETTI

MOGADISHU, Somalia, Dec. 9 — The stadium was packed, the guns were
cocked and even the drenching rain could not douse the jihadist fire.

Thousands of Somalis, from fully veiled, machine-gun-toting women to
little boys in baggy fatigues, gathered Friday to rally against what
they called foreign aggression. As a squall blew in, they punched wet
fists into the air and yelled, "Allahu akbar," or "God is great."

"I am ready to die," said Osama Abdi Rahim, dressed head to toe in
camouflage and marching around with a loaded rifle. He is 7 years old.

The inevitability of war hangs over Mogadishu, Somalia's bullet-pocked
seaside capital. But unlike the internal anarchy that has consumed the
country for 15 years, the looming battle is now with Ethiopia,
threatening to further destabilize the troubled Horn of Africa.

In the past week the increasingly militant Islamists in control of
Mogadishu and much of the rest of the country have begun a food drive,
a money drive and an AK-47 assault rifle drive, and have sent doctors
and nurses, along with countless young soldiers, to the front lines.

For its part, Ethiopia, with tacit approval from the United States,
has been steadily slipping soldiers across the border, trying to hold
off the Islamists and shore up Somalia's weak, unpopular and divided
transitional government.

Though that government has been recognized by the United Nations as
the legitimate authority in Somalia, its power barely extends to the
municipal limits of Baidoa, the inland town where it is based.

The Islamist forces, on the other hand, seem to be very popular here,
having defeated Mogadishu's warlords earlier this year to pacify one
of the world's most murderous cities.

Their troops, which United Nations officials say are secretly getting
weapons from several Arab countries and Eritrea, have encircled Baidoa
and are vowing to wage war against the Ethiopian forces unless they
leave. Ethiopian convoys have been attacked, and the Islamists
recently skirmished with soldiers from Baidoa, with dozens reported
killed. That taste of war seems to have whetted the appetite for more.

"We wait for the Ethiopians like dry land waits for rain," said
Mustafa Ali Mohammed, an Islamic leader in Burhakaba, a town near the
dividing line between the Islamists and Baidoa.

Analysts are unanimous that a full-scale conflict between the
Islamists and Ethiopia, a country with a strong Christian identity,
would be disastrous for Somalia, which is already suffering from
severe flooding and years of neglect, and for the region as a whole,
because neighboring countries may jump in.

Gen. John P. Abizaid of the United States Central Command — or Centcom
— which has responsibility for American military interests in the
region, recently flew to Ethiopia to meet with Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi, who had told American officials that he could cripple the
Islamist forces "in one to two weeks."

Walking a careful line, General Abizaid made it clear that a broad
military invasion of Somalia could create a humanitarian crisis across
the Horn of Africa, Centcom officials said, but did not tell Ethiopian
officials to pull their troops out.

Indeed, some American officials say the United States supports
Ethiopia's military buildup because it is the only way to protect the
weak Baidoa government from being overrun, force the Islamists to the
negotiating table and contain what they call a growing regional
threat.

American officials have accused the Islamists of sheltering terrorists
connected to Al Qaeda, but the Ethiopian troops' presence seems to
have only increased the potential for terrorist activity. Suicide
bombers, unknown in Somalia until a few months ago, have attacked
Baidoa twice recently, and last month the first Iraqstyle roadside
bombs were detonated against Ethiopian convoys.

Residents of Mogadishu say hundreds of fighters from other Muslim
countries have arrived at the city's main airport in recent days,
drawn by the Islamists' blaring call for a holy war against Ethiopia
and against America, which is especially despised here.

Memories are still fresh of the botched American-led relief operation
in the early 1990s, and more recently of the covert American effort to
bolster Mogadishu's warlords in an 11th-hour bid to prevent an
Islamist takeover. That strategy backfired, driving more people into
the arms of the Islamists.

"I'll be honest," said Sheik Muktar Robow Abu Monsur, the deputy
security chief for the Islamists. "America is the best friend of
Islam. It wakes up the sleeping Muslim."

In fact, Jendayi Frazer, the State Department's top official for
Africa policy, said diplomatic and intelligence officials believed
that the Islamists could be trying to provoke an Ethiopian attack as a
"rallying cry for support" to their side. The countries fought a war
from 1977 to 1978 over the Ogaden, a contested area of eastern
Ethiopia — and Somalia lost.

"If this thing goes to a military fight," Ms. Frazer said, "it's a bloodbath."

American officials helped push through a recent United Nations
resolution authorizing peacekeepers from African countries to back up
the Baidoa officials. The resolution lets the Baidoa government, but
not the Islamists, bring in weapons despite a longstanding arms
embargo.

The problem with that strategy, many analysts say, is that it misreads
the Islamists' power, rooted not so much in their military strength —
a few hundred armed pickup trucks and a few thousand fighters — but in
their popular support. The Islamists emerged several years ago as a
network of clan-based courts that unified warring factions.

Ethiopia may have the strongest military in the region, trained by
American advisers and complete with jet fighters, but attacking
Islamist forces may only drive them underground, into a guerrilla
insurgency.

American officials have said they are hoping that the moderates within
the Islamic administration will prevail over hard-line, war-mongering
elements. But if there ever was such a struggle, it is over.

Three months ago, Ibrahim Hassan Addou, the foreign minister for the
Islamists and an American citizen of Somali descent, talked of sharing
power and holding elections.

Now, like the others, he is talking war, in terms nearly
indistinguishable from the most militant Islamic leaders. Moderates,
he said, were backed into a corner by an American-led campaign to
discredit and isolate the Islamic administration.

"Everybody was against us from the beginning, and now we have no
choice but to fight," he said. "What I don't understand is why the
whole world is trying to throw its weight behind a government that has
been totally rejected by its own people."

United Nations officials say they support the government in Baidoa
because it is the most representative of the various clans in Somalia.
But one side effect of the multiclan approach has been ceaseless
disputes between clan elders. Meanwhile, the Islamists have
aggressively expanded their territory.

Many officials in Baidoa vehemently opposed calling on Ethiopian
muscle, fearing a backlash. In the past some Somali clans have teamed
up with Ethiopian forces to dominate other clans, ending in greater
bloodshed. So when the idea of bringing Ethiopian soldiers to Baidoa
was first proposed last year, it proved so divisive that it set off a
brawl among officials — and it failed to pass.

"The problem with having Ethiopians defend us is that they make us
look like the puppets that the Islamists accuse us of being," said
Sharif Hassan Sheik Aden, the speaker of the parliament in Baidoa.
Ethiopian officials insist that they have sent only a few hundred
military advisers to Baidoa, but United Nation monitors and witnesses
on the ground say several thousand Ethiopian infantry troops are
digging in near the city.

Sporadic peace talks between Baidoa officials and the Islamists have
produced little but broken promises. The only thing that seems to be
delaying all-out war is the mutual recognition that a decisive victory
is unlikely.

The Islamists are reluctant to march on Baidoa and set off a crushing
Ethiopian response, while the Ethiopians seem fearful of trying to
storm the Islamists' stronghold of Mogadishu, the city that claimed
the lives of 18 American soldiers in the infamous "Black Hawk Down"
battle in 1993.

A growing number of Democrats in Congress are urging the Bush
administration to change course and deal with the Islamists for what
they are: the power on the ground.

"The Islamists aren't going away, so the sooner we talk to them, the
better," said Representative Donald M. Payne, the New Jersey Democrat
who is expected to become the chairman of the House subcommittee on
Africa when his party takes control of Congress in January.

In Mogadishu the Islamists are continuing their hearts-and-minds
campaign, organizing neighborhood cleanups, delivering food to the
needy and resuscitating old national institutions like the Supreme
Court, which was given a fresh coat of paint and reopened in October.

Streets that were clogged with years of debris are now clear and
bureaucracy is budding, with more rules and more paperwork, including
forms at the airport that ask name, age, nationality and religion —
Muslim or non-Muslim being the only choices.

All the talk of slaughtering Ethiopian invaders and their American
sponsors, though, seems to have brought out a harsher side of the
Islamic administration. Nearly every day, rings of people gather on
Mogadishu's streets to watch lashings, and the crowds cheer as leather
whips cut canals into flesh. One Islamic leader in a town north of
Mogadishu recently issued an edict threatening that anyone who did not
pray five times a day would be beheaded.

"It's black and white," said the leader, Hussein Barre Rage. "The
Koran says people must pray."

Not long ago Somalia was a place where women wore skirts and men drank
beer, and even today a large chunk of the population is quietly
concerned about the absolutist direction the Islamists are heading in.

But the prospects of war with Ethiopia seem to have pushed many of
these people solidly into the Islamic camp.

"I'm not into thought control," said Dahir Abdullahi Hirsi, a
pharmacist in Mogadishu. "But I hate Ethiopians even more."

Jeffrey Gettleman reported from Mogadishu, and Mark Mazzetti from
Washington.</blockquote>

It looks like we may be heading to two, three, many regional wars in
the Middle East, except not the kind that Che had in mind.
--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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