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WEST IS FANNING SECTARIAN DIVIDE IN MUSLIMS TO PROMOTE ITS CLASH OF CIVILISATION AGENDA
by Open-Publishing - Friday 16 September 20057 comments
Wars and conflicts International USA
The West is promoting clash of civilisation to manufacture a new conflict. After the fall of Soviet Union Wester ruling classes need a new enemy to creat fear among western public. Terms such as political Islam and terrorism were coined in the early 1990s with a purpose. Western security forces, big businesses and the media have joined hands in promoting this policy of hatred and fear. The war Iraq is just an example. The media and politicians both sell lies coming from security forces sadly western public buy such lies because they are unwilling to give up their life style, their false development and believe in false peace. Thats why they buy lies such as threat of civil war in Iraq and manufactured characters such as Abu Zakawi. The media is promoting Abu Zakawi without questioning the authenticity of his claims. The Western media claim to be objective and it varifies all information but when it comes to non-western world the western becomes just propaganda tool for their masters. For the last three years western politicians and media are talking about Shia, Sunni divide in Iraq. It is a lie. There have been no such divide in Iraq before the western invasion of Iraq. Still Iraqis believe in one national identity. But the western media, politicians and intelligence sources are promoting the threat of civil war in Iraq making it an excuse to continue occupation. But their is no civil war so they are creating it by using the name of Abu Zakawi. And Sunni insurgents. The media never question such as where is abu Zakawi? How can ’independent’ media know that claims made on a website are coming from Zakawi? How can they say that Sunnis are killing Shias? Why would Sunni kill Shias when the both face same occupation, insults and problems at the hand s of the West. The following may explain why the west is doing so.
Iraq’s charter: A divisive framework?
By Laith Saud
Monday 12 September 2005, 11:37 Makka Time, 8:37 GMT
Now that the Iraqi constitution is facing a referendum, all of the major figures in Iraqi politics (including of course Zalmay Khalilzad) are campaigning hard on its behalf.
A great deal depends on the passing of this constitution for the National Assembly and its American benefactor, including, but not limited to, the maintenance of the current parliament and the instigation of a process to begin dividing Iraq.
The western media has laboured hard in portraying the "Sunni community" as the major source of delay in the drafting process. The Bush administration has habitually presented events in Iraq as sectarian and ethnically biased; this presentation is not arbitrary or due to "misunderstanding" as some have claimed.
More truthfully, differing visions of Iraq are what delayed and essentially prevented the constitutional process from achieving consensual support. On the one hand we have an American-endorsed vision that proposes dividing Iraq up and we have the view of the opposition, which accepts nothing less than a unified Iraq.
In the autumn of 2004 the RAND Corporation, an American research company, published a research brief for the United States Navy arguing "cleavages within the Muslim world pose challenges and opportunities ... for US interests and strategy".
"I am making an appeal to all Iraqi citizens. Please do not divide yourselves anymore than you already have, and by dividing you empower the occupation and their agendas for your natural resources."
Angie, US
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The RAND study highlights current divisions in the Muslim world between the Sunni and Shia, as well as between Arabs and non-Arabs as crucial to US interests.
The ethnic and sectarian federalism that has been proposed in Iraq fits well into this divisive framework. This insight into the strategic thinking of US thinktanks provides a contextual background to any assessment of US involvement in the Arab and Muslim world.
First let us consider the elections of January that set up the National Assembly. Many claim the elections evince the will of the Iraqi people; as such, whatever debates that take place within the parliament reflect the concerns of everyday Iraqis, including federalism.
It must be stated from the onset that the January elections cannot be seen as a barometre of the will of the Iraqi people. Seymour Hersh has recently exposed American tampering with the elections; he accused the administration of channelling funds towards particular campaigns to offset other more popular parties.
While the US encourages a political doctrine that is untenable and contentious, they do so at the expense of Iraqi time and lives
Secondly, groups like the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) never hinted at requesting a federal Iraq. This was partly due to the deficiency of the elections themselves, which made no provisions for public debate or party platforms.
But the SCIRI’s newfound enthusiasm for a federal Iraq, not to mention its failure to end the occupation which it claimed it would do, has no doubt surprised and disappointed many Iraqi voters.
The make-up the National Assembly is largely sectarian and ethnic. Iraqis who chose to vote in January were largely compelled to do so considering the lack of an appropriate infrastructure for an election. This should not be taken, however, as an indication of sectarianism and ethnic chauvinism in Iraq itself.
The Bush administration invaded Iraq according to an ideology of sectarianism, the schematics of which are revealed in the RAND study. Since the signing of the constitution this past week, the US has already laboured hard in persuading the world that it is a sound document. The question is, why?
It would seem more appropriate that the US remain silent and allow the electoral process to unfold as it will. The answer lies within the ideology of the occupation itself, which relies on sectarian conflict in Iraq.
The US is heavily invested in solidifying a federal Iraq and making this National Assembly permanent. The failure of the constitution to pass the referendum vote means the dissolution of the National Assembly itself and requires a new election in December.
The Bush administration has no doubt established good relations with the current National Assembly - but furthermore - the National Assembly and the constitution it proposes reflects the ideology of sectarianism that also serves as the basis for US action.
The constitutional committee’s postponement of the federalism debate is perfunctory at best. The current draft contains a great deal of language that ensures an ethnic and sectarian tension in the country.
Baghdadi Kurds are intermarried with their Arab Sunni and Shia compatriots and consider a federal Iraq simply outrageous. The same can be said of the Arab population of the country
Firstly, the preamble explicitly describes the Republic of Iraq as "federa". In addition, consider Article Four, Sections Four and Five of the proposed constitution: This article stipulates at least four different "official" languages for the country and makes provisions for more.
It is proposed that Kurdish and Arabic will stand as official languages of the entire country while other languages will be official in the "regions" where they dominate. The question remains: where are these regions?
Iraq is one of the most well-integrated societies in the Middle East. There are millions of Turkmen all over the country; Baghdad houses one million Kurds alone and Assyrians and others are likewise spread throughout the country.
Offering "official language" status to simply any group in the country will place an unwarranted pressure on all groups in Iraq to "represent" themselves through an official language.
This sentiment will no doubt produce ethnic chauvinism and efforts by some to intimidate those who do not speak the language in a particular region.
We have already seen the Kurdish Peshmarga (Kurdish national militia) active in harassing and forcibly evicting Arabs, Turkmen and Assyrians from their home in Kirkuk. An ethnic based north has been the motivation of their actions and the political process in Iraq has been a powerful impetus in this regard.
As opponents [of the proposed constitution] have stated, the constitution will induce the break up of Iraqi society and eventually Iraq. So far accusations that the US is attempting to break up Iraq have been met with suspicion and dismissed as mere conspiracy. We have already seen evidence of US thinktanks advocating the exacerbation of divisions in the Muslim world. Yet what other interests could breaking Iraq up serve?
In the past, dividing sovereign countries has often been accompanied by violence and civil war. On the one hand the Bush administration says it must remain because of the threat of civil war, then on the other, the administration endorses a constitution that seems to encourage the break up of Iraq and the threat of civil war. It would seem that US action is perpetuating the US presence.
Iraq is one of the most well-integrated societies in the Middle East
Considering the stiff resistance to the occupation and the enormous cost of maintaining US troops many analysts argue that the US would like to get out of Iraq as soon as possible. Yet it must be remembered that Iraq sits atop the largest oil reserves in the world and the United States will do anything to ensure its possession of them.
If Iraq cannot be managed as an entity then breaking up Iraq into essentially three small oil rich states renders them extremely wealthy and weak, thereby requiring the "protection" of the United States, just as in the [Arab] Gulf [states].
The polarised views that the Americans and National Assembly hold on federalism, in contrast to the opposition, reveals who has a greater sense of the country. It is interesting to note that in the January elections, for example the united Kurdish slate did not garner many votes in Baghdad, in spite of the presence of one million Kurds. Why?
Because Baghdadi Kurds are intermarried with their Arab Sunni and Shia compatriots and consider a federal Iraq simply outrageous. The same can be said of the Arab population of the country.
It would seem more appropriate that the US remain silent and allow the electoral process to unfold as it will
The ideological basis of federalism is another example where ideology, in this case sectarianism, bares little resemblance to reality.
While the US encourages a political doctrine that is untenable and contentious, they do so at the expense of Iraqi time and lives. The opposition on the other hand advocates a unified Iraq that respects Iraq’s integrated reality.
The resistance, therefore, with its ideology of unity and civic identity represents a coherent, sensible and realistic approach to Iraqi politics. The commission could not simply plunge into federalism with all its complications and senselessness at the present time - if they do so within the next few months it is doubtful that Iraq will follow.
Laith Saud is an Iraqi academic researcher and lecturer in the United States.
Forum posts
16 September 2005, 16:29
So this is the garbage that Aljazeera spews. It figures. First of all there has always been clashes amongst the muslims: Shia vs Sunni, Wahhabism vs Sunni, etc. They didn’t need the west to fight amongst themselves so the premise of this article is wrong. As for the Sunni role in Iraq, they have resisted the whole process. They were the segment that chose not to vote by a huge number; that it was an obvious political error was apparent because the resulting initial government ended up with few sunni voices. As for the Iraqi constitution, it is a marvelous document. It manages to protect the Kurdish autonomy while still being part of a shia-dominated majority and it recognizes that Iraq has many different minorities and protects their linguistic customs and identities among other things. The EU constitution which had more pages that was full of pointlessness didn’t do half as good a job on its creation. There is a part in the iraqi constitution that recognizes Islam but it is not an Islamic republic, there is another segment in the constitution that says the Arab people of Iraq are part of the Arab world. The Iraq constitution will take Islam as a guide in their laws and policies but it does not rule them. The Arabs while maintaining their identity with the Arab world does not dominate the rest of the non-Arabs in Iraq. It’s a wonderful compromise and this is why it is giving fits to the Arab world and to aljazeera.
16 September 2005, 19:13
You’ll never be able to prove such a thing. That does not make it untrue. We are faced with
a) They are incompetent and they really thought, like star-eyed school children that, we could form a new government in Iraq after taking all previously experienced people (Bathists) out of all possitions of responsibility.
b) They have some ’plan’ to divide Iraq into the three logical segments (Sunni, Shite, Kurd).
I’m reluctant to believe b) because it would leave a large Shite region ripe for closer association or possible control by Iran. That would create, in effect, a larger Iran.
I just think the neocons are idealistic rather than practical thinkers who chose the sound of an idea, ignoring the vision sent to their brain by their own eyeballs.
Wishful thinking nitwits. IMHO
17 September 2005, 00:50
This argument is based on the premise that a constitution matters.
I live in a country where the constitution guarantees freedom of assembly and the right to redress of grievances. The last time I went to a public gathering against the policies of the Bush administration, the police were tasering people and putting them behind fences in an abandoned lot, which they euphamistically call "free speech zones". In my country a person can be detained indefinitely without a warrant, lawyer, phone call, hearing, or appearance before a judge. In my country the military can enter a city on the premise that it is in a state of "emergency" and point their guns at journalists, taking away their cameras. In my country anything I buy, read, borrow from the library, write or read in an E-mail, or listen to on the internet can be monitored and recorded without a court order, without a judge, and without my being informed. In my country, Grandmas are imprisoned for political beliefs. In my country, elections are stolen. Here, people in prisons are tortured. In my country, all these things are in blatant violation of the highest law of the land, the US Constitution.
I don’t think the US gives a rat’s ass about Iraq’s constitution, their thinking isn’t that sophisticated and they already know what the outcome is because it will be whatever they decide it to be. In 3 years, Jeb Bush will be president and Iraq will be thiers to suck dry. The only question is whether it will be 1 colony or 3 colonies. This ain’t Viet Nam, they will never let go of the oil. On that point this article is correct.
17 September 2005, 05:41
You do realize that this is not all about you, don’t you?
17 September 2005, 06:21
I meant "I" in a rhetorical not a literal sense, but obviously that point escaped you. Nefarious leaders merely use constitutions as phony ideals and seldom live up to them at the level of the populace. I don’t care about me but thanks for checking in...
17 September 2005, 12:16
And you do realize blithering idiots look past the truth and the point in order to find any small insignificant detail to focus criticism on, don’t you?
17 September 2005, 17:50
Well, I’m glad you realize that about yourself. Well done!