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Iraq at crossroads as bombs explode
By   Arwa Damon,  CNN
April 30, 2013 -- Updated 1347 GMT (2147 HKT) CNN.com 
Editor's note: CNN's senior international 
correspondent, Arwa Damon based in Beirut, is an award-winning 
journalist and also one of the network's Iraq specialists. In 2010 she 
investigated the state of Iraq as the U.S. moved from operation Iraqi 
Freedom to Operation New Dawn, and was in Iraq for many of the war's 
historic moments. Before she left Lebanon for Iraq again she spoke with 
CNN.com about the latest surge of violence in the country. 
Beirut, Lebanon (CNN) -- Twenty-five people died in a spate of car bombs 
Monday. Three of the bombs exploded at markets where people were shopping. Last 
week, bombs blew up at Sunni mosques amid Friday prayers and at a restaurant in 
a Shiite area.
The uptick in violence has prompted fears among Iraqi leaders and international 
powers that the tensions 
between Sunnis and Shiites could escalate further and threaten to burst 
into full-blown sectarian war.
Who's killing who? 
In some instances it's Iraqi 
security forces clashing with gunmen. In others cases it seems to be 
pure sectarian violence targeting the civilian population in easy to 
reach targets to cause maximum damage; to reignite divisions that never 
fully disappeared.
Why is this violence escalating?  
Can Iraq combat sectarian violence? 
After the U.S. military withdrawal, sectarianism began to re-emerge with a 
vengeance, plus al Qaeda in Iraq and various other groups are trying to 
re-establish themselves and 
there is fallout from what's happening in neighboring Syria.
For those closely following what 
has been happening in Iraq, this is not a surprise. To a certain degree 
the Iraqi government and other parties have been trying to dial back 
these tensions, but some steps taken by the Iraqi government serve only 
to aggravate them. Tensions are higher now than they have been for 
years.
Iraq's underlying problems have 
never been adequately addressed. There is a growing discontent within 
the Sunni minority and a growing number demonstrations against the 
predominantly Shia government.
And it's all being aggravated by what's happening in Syria.
What is the Syria Connection? 
There have been long tribal ties 
between Iraq's Sunni heartland and tribes in Syria. Those tribes feel 
they are being oppressed by Shias whether it's the government in Iraq or the 
Alawite sect of Shia to which Syria's President Bashar al-Assad 
belongs.
In some ways both nations are proxy battlefields for a longtime power struggle 
between Saudi Arabia, with 
its Sunni majority, and Shia-ruled Iran and their respective allies.
At the same time Iraq's Sunni 
population has its own legitimate reasons for demonstrating against the 
government which have nothing to do with what is happening in Syria. 
That being said, the conflict in Syria is throwing more fuel into an 
already burning fire.
What is the state of the Iraqi security forces? 
Despite all the training they 
received from the U.S. military they are still largely not properly 
trained to deal with the multi-layered challenges they face.
Additionally, Iraqi security forces are viewed by some as abusing their power; 
viewed not as a national 
force protecting the country but as a force protecting the Shia 
government.
And it doesn't help that when driving through Baghdad you see Shia 
paraphernalia on the security checkpoints.
There have been accusations of 
security forces targeting the Sunni population. Groups like Human Rights Watch 
accused the Iraqi security forces of abusing their power and 
using too much force to quell Sunni protests.
What are the dynamics between Iraq's Sunni and Shia populations? 
To simplify an incredibly complex 
situation some Sunnis enjoyed a number of advantages under Saddam 
Hussein, which have completely slipped away during the rise of the 
Shia-led government.
To Iraq's detriment, the government from the onset was built upon religious 
identity -- sectarianism -- and has failed to develop into a nationalistic 
entity.
Iraq, which over the last decades 
has seen itself ripped apart, has yet to forge its own identity as a 
nation. Today the country is -- as the U.N. representative to Iraq 
recently put it -- at a crossroads.
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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