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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JBTFD who wrote (136216)6/10/2004 8:34:02 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Why wouldn't Sadr run? Assuming he's not in jail. But if so, why not someone just like him?

After the fall of the Shah, came the Mullahs.

After the fall of the Russian-backed government in Afghanistan, came the Taliban.

I repeat that I am glad that Saddam is gone, he was a horrible murderous tyrant.

That doesn't mean that the next ruler won't be a horrible murderous tyrant.



To: JBTFD who wrote (136216)6/10/2004 8:36:47 PM
From: KyrosL  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Many articles recently suggest Sadr will be a potent political force in Iraq next year. Here is one:

omaha.com

Published Thursday
June 10, 2004

Support seems to grow for Iraqi renegade cleric




KNIGHT RIDDER NEWSPAPERS
NAJAF, Iraq - After months of losing hundreds, if not thousands, of men in battles with the U.S. military, renegade cleric Muqtada al-Sadr appears to be more popular than ever in Iraq.


U.S. leaders were optimistic that last week's truce, calling for al-Sadr to move his men out of Najaf and Kufa, was a sign of a weakened leader.

But many Iraqi religious and political leaders say al-Sadr's public appeal is higher than ever and say he seems poised to gain ground in Iraq's political arena, threatening America's plans for the country.

If elections were held today, polls and interviews on the street suggest, the venomously anti-American al-Sadr would command a big percentage of the vote.

In a recent poll of 1,640 Iraqis across the country, conducted by the Iraq Center for Research and Strategic Studies, more people indicated support for al-Sadr than for the new prime minister or a long list of other new Iraqi government officials.

Perhaps more striking: Al-Sadr polled just 2.8 percentage points behind the 70 percent support given to Iraq's most revered Shiite leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani.

That, some in Iraq say, was al-Sadr's goal all along: He always had aimed at grabbing a leadership position, not cities, said Redha Jawad Taki, a spokesman for the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, one of the main Shiite parties here.

Any doubts about al-Sadr's success were erased Saturday, when he was invited to meet with al-Sistani, who in the past distanced himself from the upstart young cleric.

Many saw the meeting as a stamp of legitimacy for al-Sadr.

During the past year, al-Sadr's name has been linked to the killings and attempted killings of several rival clerics. He is under an arrest warrant for one of the killings last year.

Yet al-Sadr has become a folk hero to many.

"He was behaving in a way that the majority of Iraqis sympathize with," said professor Hamid Fadhel Hassan.



To: JBTFD who wrote (136216)6/11/2004 2:12:25 PM
From: Rascal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
June 11, 2004 -- 01:24 PM EDT // link // print)
The BBC reports that Muqtada al-Sadr delivered a conciliatory sermon on Friday: "Mr Sadr called upon the interim government to work to end the occupation according to a timetable set by Iraqi officials, reported a correspondent for Voice of Mujahidin radio present at the sermon. Mr Sadr added that the formation of the government was a good opportunity to bury past differences and 'forge ahead toward the building of a unified Iraq'."

talkingpointsmemo.com

Rascal @ArabReHab,com