London Telegraph
 
 
ISIS invades Iraq: this is a war of  religion
 
By Damian Thompson 
Last updated: June 15th, 2014 

 
The relationship between _the murderous zealots of ISIS_ 
(http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iraq/10899712/Iraq-crisis-ISIS-battles-fo
r-Baghdad-live.html)  and the rest  of the Muslim world is too complicated 
to sum up concisely. It goes without  saying that hatred between Sunnis and 
Shias lies at its heart. They adhere to  profoundly different versions of 
Islam: where radical Sunnis are disgusted by  cultic practices or religious 
art that distract from the teachings of Mohammed,  Shias embrace a messianic 
cult of martyrdom and ritual self-mortification – and  claim a line of 
descent from the Prophet that Sunnis regard as heresy. 
This fault line dates back to the early years of Islam and is familiar to  
anyone who knows the first thing about the religion. But to make sense of 
the  new Iraqi civil war it's also necessary to untangle the relationship 
between the  fanatics of ISIS and the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, notionally an 
ally of the  West. The pampered aristocracy of the House of Saud may not wish 
to be publicly  associated with terrorists, but it is the Saudis who, since 
the 18th century,  have nurtured the ultra-puritan Wahhabi ideology adopted 
by those same  terrorists. Wahhabis or Salafists (the two terms are almost 
interchangeable)  seek religious purity through iconoclasm. In Mecca this 
takes the form of the  Saudis razing every shrine associated with Mohammed, 
lest 
they encourage  superstition, while simultaneously building hotels modelled 
on Las Vegas. In  Iraq and Syria, non-Sunni places of worship are also 
razed, but the iconoclasm  is accompanied by the slitting of throats. 
Many rich Saudis are secretly thrilled by the advance of ISIS, whose  
atrocities are an extreme manifestation of their own Wahhabi ideology. And they 
 
will gloat mightily if ISIS fulfils its ambition of reducing every Shia 
shrine  in Iraq to blood-spattered rubble. As we speak, funds are being 
transferred from  their bank accounts to the organisers of the insurgency, who 
despise Saudi  princelings for their "Western" lifestyles but are more than 
happy 
to pocket the  cash. 
The transactions and alliances surrouding this civil war are sordid and 
cruel  on both sides. But this is in the nature of wars of religion, which 
throughout  history have combined barbarism and hypocrisy. The conflict between 
Catholics  and Protestants in early modern Europe produced scenes that were 
as awful as  those we are witnessing today. We did, however, grow out of it. 
The Muslim world  still hasn't and you can't help wondering if it ever  
will.

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