Shiah dan sunni itu sudah berbunuhan sejak empat belas abad yang lalu..

Hingga sekarang.

Dan bukan hanya di Iraq atau di Siria seperti sekarang...


http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/22/opinion/iraq-dark-days-returning/index.html?hpt=hp_c1

Are the dark days returning to Iraq?
By Shashank Joshi, special for CNN
May 22, 2013 -- Updated 1137 GMT (1937 HKT)
Source: CNN 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
        * Monthly death toll has doubled in Iraq; now highest figure since end 
of war
        * Increasing toll is related to authoritarian streak of PM Nuri 
al-Maliki, says Shashank Joshi
        * Joshi: Sectarian is closely linked to protests, which are 
concentrated in Sunni-majority areas
        * Too early to talk about Iraq's break-up, he says, but there's no 
obvious way out of violence
Editor's note: Shashank Joshi is a research fellow at the London-based think 
tank Royal United Services Institute and a doctoral student of international 
relations at Harvard 
University's Department of Government. He specializes in international 
security in South Asia and the Middle East.
London (CNN) -- According to the United Nations' mission in Iraq, 712 Iraqis 
were violently killed in April 2013. This is both normal and extraordinary. It 
is normal 
because it pales into comparison beside the monthly death toll in the 
worst years of the country's civil war. It is extraordinary because it 
is the highest such figure since that civil war subsided five years ago. 
Understanding the violence requires grasping three confluent trends: 
the increasingly authoritarian streak of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri 
al-Maliki, the rise of both peaceful and violent protest among Iraq's 
aggrieved Sunni minority (a fifth of the population), and, finally, a 
regional trend of worsening sectarian tensions between Shia and Sunni 
Muslims.
 
Shashank Joshi
Each of these strands is 
tightly woven together. It was the invasion of Iraq a decade ago and the 
subsequent empowerment of its Shia majority that sparked fears of what 
Jordan's King Abdullah famously called a "Shia crescent" from Syria to Iran. 
Prime Minister al-Maliki spent his years of exile 
under Saddam in both those countries, and is widely seen as having 
aligned Iraq more closely to Iranian interests -- for instance, allowing 
Iranian over-flights of arms to the Assad regime. This diplomatic shift 
compounded a political one. 
Al-Maliki has undermined political institutions that were designed to be 
independent, such as the central bank and election commission. He has seized 
personal control of key army and intelligence units, many of them CIA-backed, 
including the 6,000-strong Iraqi Special Forces.
Read more: Iraq at crossroads as bombs explode 
Attacks highlight rising terror in Iraq   
Iraq still divided along sectarian lines  
 100 moments from the Iraq War 
When the last American 
troops left Iraq at the end of 2011, al-Maliki pounced. Vice-President 
Tareq al-Hashemi, the most senior Sunni figure in the government, was 
forced to flee Iraq and was later sentenced to death. A year later in December 
2012, hundreds of bodyguards and staff of 
Finance Minister Rafi al-Issawi, another senior Sunni, were arrested, 
triggering major protests. And on April 23, the situation worsened when Iraqi 
forces backed by 
helicopters killed dozens of peaceful Sunni protesters in the town of 
Hawijah. The town was seen by nearby Kurds as a conduit for suicide 
bombers, and the government claimed that the protesters were harboring 
militants from a Sunni militant group called the Naqshbandia Order.
Maliki established a 
ministerial committee to look into the Hawijah episode and has made a 
few other concessions, but the damage was done: a previously peaceful 
movement has grown angrier and, in places, more violent. Taken together, 
Maliki's heavy-handed and sectarian actions have fanned flames that 
were never really extinguished. The result is a powerful sense of Sunni 
victimhood with many policies, such as de-Baathification (the removal of 
Saddam's party loyalists from positions of influence), seen as little 
more than collective punishment of Sunnis.
The new wave of Iraqi 
protest embodies this trend. The protests are concentrated in 
Sunni-majority provinces. Protesters frequently excoriate Iran's 
influence in Iraqi politics and acclaim the Sunni-majority Free Syrian 
Army (FSA) fighting the neighboring Assad regime. Sometimes, their 
slogans are nakedly and belligerently sectarian. This naturally alienates many 
Iraqi Shias, who resent being associated 
with a foreign power and see the FSA as retrograde, Saudi-backed 
jihadists rather than freedom fighters. They are also likelier to see 
Maliki's various power-grabs as necessary steps to bring order and 
security to Iraq in the face of a growing regional and domestic threat 
from Sunni extremists such as al Qaeda and its ideological brethren. 
Iraq's increasingly autonomous Kurds, buoyed by potentially vast oil 
reserves, share some of these fears and sit in uneasy alliance with Shia 
political groups.
Indeed, the Syrian civil 
war has widened Iraq's sectarian divisions and created a source of major 
instability. In March, around 50 Syrian soldiers who had fled into Iraq were 
ambushed and killed. The single most powerful Syrian rebel group, Jabhat 
al-Nusra, is an 
offshoot of al Qaeda in Iraq, and its personal and logistical networks run 
across the Syria-Iraq border. If al-Assad were to fall, this would have a 
catalytic effect on parts 
of Iraq, amplifying Sunni militancy and resulting in a flood of weapons 
of fighters across the border.
Does this mean that Iraq 
is fated to return to the dark days of 2006-2007, when death squads were run in 
the heart of government and Baghdad faced waves of ethnic 
cleansing? It is important to note that while Iraq itself bleeds, the 
Iraqi state is strong. Al-Maliki is vulnerable in Sunni-majority areas 
where the Sunni militias of the al-Sahwa movement provide security, but 
his large and cohesive security forces serve as a buffer against wider 
chaos. Moreover, many Sunni groups are eager to keep the violence in 
check, having previously suffered greatly at the hands of al Qaeda in 
Iraq. It is certainly too early to talk about the country's break-up.
Does this mean that Iraq is fated to return to the dark days of 
2006-2007, when death squads were run in the heart of government and 
Baghdad faced waves of ethnic cleansing?
Shashank Joshi
Next year's parliamentary elections will be a pivotal moment. At the last 
elections in 2010, the 
Sunni-dominated but secular Iraqiya bloc won more seats but couldn't 
form a government, and eventually let Maliki take the top spot.
This time round, it will be harder for Maliki to outmaneuver his political 
rivals: they have 
learnt that power sharing is a sham, and the Kurds are in a stronger 
position. In provincial elections held last month, Maliki's coalition saw its 
vote share decline, with many of his harder-line Shia Islamist rivals faring 
better.
Another victory for 
Maliki under contested conditions would produce severe political 
instability, especially if present levels of violence continue. The 
imperative is for political accommodation, reconciliation, and 
compromise. Yet Maliki is unlikely to opt for this route as long as he 
feels he can keep his grip on power with the help of his swollen army, 
paramilitary, and intelligence apparatus. There is no obvious way out 
for Iraq.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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