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Iraq
Al-Sadr Shift: Doom and Gloom Ahead for US Forces
2008-04-24
He's pointing exactly where to put the red laser dot.
Now -- he's shifting away from politics and favoring fight.

Article written by HAMZA HENDAWI and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA, Associated Press Writers (these two guys seemingly have their own picture of all that has happened the last few weeks. Must have had fun sitting down, writing this one.

Muqtada al-Sadr is considering setting aside his political ambitions and restarting a full-scale fight against U.S.-led forces — a worrisome shift that may reflect Iranian influence on the young cleric and could open the way for a shadow state protected by his powerful Mahdi Army.
Powerful, huh? This is the same Mahdi army that's being rolled up by the IA and our guys? The one with a deficit of logistics, strategy, communications, and leadership, but no shortage of hard boyz? That one?
A possible breakaway path — described to The Associated Press by Shiite lawmakers and politicians — would represent the ultimate backlash to the Iraqi government's pressure on al-Sadr to renounce and disband his Shiite militia.
Also a chance for Maliki to consolidate all the non-crazy Shiites and get them in line with the Kurds and reasonable Sunnis. I smell majority here. He could get this done before August, go to Denver and win the nomination.
By snubbing the give-and-take of politics, al-Sadr would have a freer hand to carve out a kind of parallel state with its own militia and social services along the lines of Hezbollah in Lebanon, a Shiite group founded with Iran's help in the 1980s.
Assuming he lived more than a day ...
It also would carry potentially disastrous security implications as the Pentagon trims its troops strength and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki finally shows progress on national reconciliation.

Last week, the main Sunni political bloc announced provisional plans to rejoin the Shiite-led coalition nine months after quitting the government. The Sunnis are pleased with the squeeze on al-Sadr's movement as well as an amnesty law that could free many detainees.
They've also figured out that al-Qaeda is not their friend, and that the quickest way to get the Americans out of Anbar is to settle down and get along.
"Muqtada has shown a great deal of patience not calling for an all-out war yet with so much pressure on him," said Mohan Abedin, director of research at London's Center for the Study of Terrorism and an expert on Shiite affairs. "The Mahdi Army is by far the most powerful Iraqi faction. It can cause damage on a massive scale if it goes to war."
Unless the leadership gets rolled up, which is happening now, and the more reasonable Mahdis decide to stay home and take care of their families. Who wants to be the last Sadrist to die for Mookie?
Al-Sadr's next move is still uncertain, but he clearly holds important cards.

The Mahdi Army is estimated to have about 60,000 fighters — with at least 5,000 thought to be highly trained commandos — and is emboldened by its strong resistance to an Iraqi-led crackdown launched last month in the southern city of Basra and elsewhere.
The one where the IA is now rolling up neighborhoods in Basra, Sadr City and 'elsewhere' ...
Al-Sadr's movement also holds sway over the densely populated Shiite parts of Baghdad and across the Shiite south by controlling vital needs such as fuel and running social services such as clinics.

A cease-fire declared last summer by al-Sadr has been credited with helping bring a steep drop violence.
Which Mookie needed to do because he couldn't start ops on his own.
But al-Sadr — who has been in the Iranian seminary city of Qom for the past year — is seriously considering getting himself martyred tearing up the truce and disassociating himself from his political bloc in parliament, according to loyalists and Shiite politicians interviewed by the AP over the past two weeks.
Mookie is hiding in Iran while his hard boyz slug it out with the IA. Still can't believe we're not using that fact to its full propaganda advantage ...
Then al-Sadr would be free to unleash Mahdi attacks on U.S. and Iraqi forces, the political insiders said.

They include members of the 30-seat Sadrist faction in parliament and members of rival Shiite parties, including two who saw al-Sadr recently in Iran. All requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.
30 seats is about 10% of the Iraqi parliament. Maliki can govern quite nicely with the rest. Mookie is in serious danger of forming a 'Rejectionist Front', and history teaches what happens shortly after that ...
"The emphasis is now on weapons and fighting, not politics," said one of the lawmakers in the Sadrist bloc. "(Al-Sadr) now only communicates with the Mahdi Army commanders."
By phone. Secure phone. From a secret location. Which changes daily.
Any Mahdi Army offensive could have serious repercussions. Mahdi fighters engaged in fierce battles with U.S. forces in 2004 and then were blamed for waves of roadside bombings that were once the chief killer of American troops. Mahdi militiamen also fought Iraqi security forces to a virtual standstill last month in Basra before an Iranian-supervised truce.
That's one version ...
It's unknown how much al-Sadr's Iranian hosts are shaping his views.

Al-Sadr, who is in his mid-30s, is hiding studying in Qom under the supervision of Ayatollah Kazim al-Haeri, a reclusive Iraqi cleric close to Iranian hard-liners.
Since the Iraqi clerics in Najaf have had a disinclination to let Mookie study with them. Wonder why ...
Washington accuses Iran of aiding Shiite militias in Iraq, including so-called "special groups" with murky ties to the Mahdi mainstream. Iran denies the allegations.

But Iran has obvious and well known connections to the main Shiite political groups in al-Maliki's government. During the recent battles in Basra, Iran supported al-Maliki's crackdown on so-called "criminals" but did not make a clear statement on the spillover confrontation with the Mahdi Army.

Backing a Mahdi Army uprising would allow Tehran to effectively play both sides in a Shiite showdown.
Until they caught, and a lot of hard boyz on both sides die, and the smarter ones who are still alive figure out that they've been had.
A flurry of recent statements by al-Sadr has emphasized his first public role: as a firebrand militia leader after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. In a statement posted Saturday on his Web site, al-Sadr gave a "final warning" to the government to halt its crackdown or face an "open war until liberation."

Senior Mahdi Army commanders said they have taken delivery of new Iranian weapons, including sophisticated roadside bombs, Grad rockets and shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles.
That should be reason enough to hunt down the 'senior commanders' and give them exactly one chance to get their mitts in da air ...
The militia's top field commanders, they said, were senior members of the special groups. One commander, who identified himself by his nickname Abu Dhara al-Sadri, said scores of militia fighters were prepared to carry out suicide bombings against U.S. forces. Suicide bombings are the signature attacks of Sunni militants in Iraq's conflict, but the tactic was introduced against Americans in Lebanon by Shiite militants in the 1980s.

Sadrist lawmakers and aides have sent compromise-seeking proposals to al-Sadr in Qom. The ideas seek to appease al-Maliki enough to forestall his threat: barring al-Sadr's followers from running in this fall's key provincial elections unless al-Sadr disbands the Mahdi Army.

But the proposals have gone unanswered, said al-Sadr's aides. One offer, they said, would allow for creation of a new political party with no formal links to the Mahdi Army. Another would permit candidates sympathetic to the Sadrists — but with no direct links — to run as independents in the fall election.

One of the authors of the proposals, moderate cleric Riyadh al-Nouri, was gunned down April 11 in Najaf, the spiritual center for Shiites in Iraq. The reason for the slaying was not clear.
Not clear to the authors of this piece, or so they say ...
Lawmakers and politicians told the AP that al-Sadr's more belligerent tone is motivated, in part, by his wish to secure a place for himself in history as a nationalist leader and anger over the recent arrests of hundreds of supporters despite his unilateral cease-fire.

At talks this month in Qom between al-Sadr and former Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, the young cleric vowed never to disband the Mahdi Army while U.S. and other foreign forces remain in Iraq, according to Shiite political figures familiar with the meetings. Al-Jaafari has said he was mediating an accommodation between al-Sadr and al-Maliki's government.

Salah al-Obeidi, al-Sadr's chief spokesman in Iraq, acknowledged that al-Sadr and the Iranians were at present bound by close ties and common goals. However, he was quick to add that while al-Sadr and the Iranians shared common interests — namely fighting the Americans in Iraq — the cleric was nobody's puppet.

Vali Nasr, an expert on Shiite politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, said the Iranians may want al-Sadr to stay in Qom to keep him in check for the moment. "Muqtada is forcing everyone's hand right now when they (the Iranians) may not be wanting their hand forced," said Nasr.
That much he can do, but as the IA and IP showed, they'll learn from their mistakes. And Mookie can only do it once.
Posted by:Sherry

#10  Article written by HAMZA HENDAWI and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA, Associated Press Writers (these two guys seemingly have their own picture of all that has happened the last few weeks. Must have had fun sitting down, writing this one.

"Associated Press" Hires Hard Core Ideologues who Hate America. .. and Israel and the West for that matter.
Posted by: RD   2008-04-24 21:56  

#9  The standard MSM line is the guys we back are always inept, unmotivated, cowardly, and corrupt.

Ever occur to anyone that the Iranians may have the same trouble with Mookie? Look at that face! It's got prima dona written all over it.
Posted by: Chuckles Angomogum8802   2008-04-24 21:35  

#8  Could someone forward this link to Mookie in Qom:

Best Teeth Whitening Product Reviews
Posted by: GolfBravoUSMC   2008-04-24 18:22  

#7  Mookie took on God and .... um.... Lost.
Posted by: newc   2008-04-24 18:15  

#6  "5,000 thought to be highly trained commandos"
LOL! So, he knows how to do the following:
Follow the dictates of muhamedism,
Scream "death to the USA",
Know how to please a handsome goat.
Spray-fire an AK-47, and possibly
Push a button on his vest.

Please, PUH-LEASE!

Posted by: Brett   2008-04-24 18:01  

#5  The failure to crush Hezbollah allows the illusion to persist that it is a successful model for emulation by other crazies elsewhere.
Posted by: Party of Dog   2008-04-24 17:43  

#4  Can we get the people laughing graphic up here. The guys who wrote this are idiots, at least based on everything I've been reading. Sadr is getting his ass kicked all over the place. I serioulsy doubt he or his "army" are pulling punches. It is just that they are no longer in the same weight class as the IA, especially with the US behind them. No, this is a death sentence for the tater-tots. Typical Arab bluster when the sand is dissapearing beneath their feet.
Posted by: remoteman   2008-04-24 17:39  

#3  Uh Oh. We're all doomed now.
Posted by: DK70 the Scantily Clad7177   2008-04-24 17:38  

#2  "al-Sadr would have a freer hand to carve out a kind of parallel state with its own militia and social services along the lines of Hezbollah in Lebanon, a Shiite group founded with Iran's help in the 1980s."

Since the rest of the article seems to hang on that concept, I will focus my response here. Sadr already tried this. And unlike the Lebanese Army's reluctance to occupy the area South of the Litani River and Shhite areas of South Beiruit, the Iraqi Army went full scale into A: Basra, the Shiite holy cities between Baghdad and Basra and the Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City in Baghdad.

If one is going to compare Sadr's Madhi Army to Hezbollah, then Sadr has already lost because the Iraq Army has already done what the Lebanese Army so far has refused to do.

This article's thesis was valid 6 months ago but has basically been overcome by recent events. There is nothing that Sadr can do unilaterally that would result in a Hezbollah-like situation unless the Iraqi Army pulls all the way back to Baghdad, which seems practically impossible at this point.
Posted by: crosspatch   2008-04-24 16:57  

#1  "Muqtada al-Sadr is considering setting aside his political ambitions and restarting a full-scale fight against U.S.-led forces"

YAY!
Posted by: crosspatch   2008-04-24 16:49  

00:00