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Al-Qaeda and Iran 'agree on the doctrine of jihad' 
CBC  |  Posted: 04/30/2013  6:11 am EDT  |  Updated: 04/30/2013  7:46 am EDT  
Given the ideological differences between the Sunni militant group al-Qaeda and 
the theocratic Shia government in Iran, recent 
allegations that the two groups had conspired in a foiled attack in 
Canada struck many observers as odd.
But two years after the death of al-Qaeda leader Osama 
bin Laden, experts in security and Islamist radicalism say Western 
intelligence agencies can't afford to discount this possible connection.
- Watch the web interactive Truth and Lies: The last days of Osama bin Laden
- Photos: Osama bin Laden, terror mastermind
Tarek Fatah, founder of the Muslim Canadian Congress and 
author of the book Chasing a Mirage: The Tragic Illusion of an Islamic 
State,says that by dwelling on the inherent differences between 
fundamentalist Sunnis and Shias, Western governments and media have 
overlooked an obvious similarity.
Radicals on both sides believe "that the world should be under a caliphate," or 
Islamic state, he says.
"The difference is, will it be under the Islamic 
doctrines of the Shia or the Sunni? That's a long-term division. But 
both agree on the doctrine of jihad."
Last Monday, the RCMP arrested Chiheb Esseghaier of 
Montreal and Raed Jaser of Toronto, accusing them of planning an attack 
on a Via passenger train and alleging that the plotters had support from 
al-Qaeda in Iran.
Over the years, the Iranian government has been 
implicated in attacks carried out by Shia extremist groups, including 
Hezbollah in Lebanon, but many commentators expressed disbelief that 
Iran would ever collaborate with a Sunni group such as al-Qaeda.
"I think it would be extraordinarily foolish to ignore 
the obvious manifestations and likelihood of further co-operation 
between the Iranian regime and Sunni Islamic extremists, including 
al-Qaeda," says David Harris, an Ottawa-based lawyer and director of 
Insignis Strategic Research.
The Sunni-Shia schism
The roots of the Sunni-Shia schism lie in the question of succession after the 
death of the Prophet Muhammad in the seventh 
century.
Shias maintain that by not choosing the Prophet's 
son-in-law, Ali, as successor, Sunnis had defied the Prophet's will, and thus 
do not represent true Islam.
Because Saudi Arabia houses the Islamic holy sites of 
Mecca and Medina, it is considered to be the spiritual home of Sunnis, 
while Iran serves the same function for the Shia. This also largely 
explains the historic enmity between the two countries.
Examples of Islamic sectarian violence can be seen in 
places such as Pakistan, Yemen, Bahrain and especially Iraq, where 
Saddam Hussein’s persecution of Shias during his 24-year reign led to 
reprisals against Sunnis under Nouri al-Maliki’s Shia government, and 
produces sectarian attacks on an almost weekly basis.
Noomane Raboudi, an Islamic expert who teaches in the 
School of Political Studies at the University of Ottawa, says he has 
trouble believing there is any collusion between Iran and al-Qaeda.
"For the jihadists, the Shia are not even Muslims — 
[al-Qaeda] almost have the same political view of the Shia as they do of 
Western people," says Raboudi.
- Iran likely unaware of al-Qaeda’s Canadian plot, security expert says
Fatah says that many people in Western institutions such 
as government, academia and the media have fallen for the "narrative" 
that because of a history of sectarian bloodshed, radical Sunnis and 
Shias couldn't possibly collaborate.
He says it's true, for example, that bin Laden viewed the Shias as non-Muslims, 
but bin Laden also considered the establishment 
of a global Islamic state more important than dwelling on sectarian 
differences, which is why he never fought the Iranians.
"Osama might never have collaborated with Iran, but the Iranians were 
co-operating with al-Qaeda," Fatah says.
Al-Qaeda scattered after 9/11
In an effort to root out the planners of the Sept. 11 
attacks, the U.S. declared war on Afghanistan in 2001. As a result, a 
number of senior al-Qaeda members who had been the guests of the Taliban in 
Afghanistan took refuge in neighbouring Iran, according to Seth 
Jones, author of the book Hunting in the Shadows: The Pursuit of 
al-Qaeda since 9/11.
As further proof of Iranian co-operation with al-Qaeda, 
Fatah cites an example involving Ahmed Said Khadr, the late father of 
Canadian-born extremist Omar Khadr and a known al-Qaeda operative. 
According to Michelle Shepherd’s 2008 book, Guantanamo's Child: The 
Untold Story of Omar Khadr, Ahmed drove his daughter, Zaynab, to Tehran 
so she could marry another al-Qaeda member.
- Does al-Qaeda have a network in Canada?
In an article for the U.S. news site PJ Media in 2011, 
former CIA operative Brian Fairchild wrote, "One of the key aspects of 
Iran's foreign policy has been to undermine the U.S. and its allies in 
the Middle East by supporting Sunni terrorist organizations such as 
al-Qaeda, Hamas, and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad."
Despite some philosophical ideological differences, 
Harris says that Iran and a group such as al-Qaeda have a common cause 
in their defiance of the West and opposition to the state of Israel.
The fact that Iran may be close to having developed a nuclear bomb would also 
be of great interest to al-Qaeda, says Harris.
He says if the Shia Islamists that head up the theocratic regime in Tehran 
"feel they’re in a cosmic battle" against the West, 
then "it's not surprising that they might link up with the dreaded Sunni in 
order to fight the first round — and then maybe do in the Sunnis at 
an appropriate moment."

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