Saturday, July 22, 2006

Israeli Chief of Staff Halutz: Close to a 100 Hizbullah fighters dead

As Israeli troops gather on the lebanese border, the Israeli Army Chief of Staff, Dan Hallutz claimed on friday that close to a 100 Hizbullah fighters had died in the nine days of conflict, this stands in sharp contrast to the 20 in the last few days, GOC Northern Command Major General Udi Adam has stated. Hizbullah sources has confirmed eight dead.

The badly hit city of Tyre burried at least 86 bodies friday, in a mass funeral. The bodies were fom all over the south.

The amount of deadly cassualties are at least 340 lebanese and 33 Israelis, 15 civilians and 18 soldiers.

About 500 000 are believed to be internaly displaced, and 150 000 has sought refugee inside Syria. UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan warned that Lebanon was on it´s way to be a humanitarian disaster.

The evacuation of foreign nationals, the largest since the evacuation of the brittish forces in Dunqurque 1940 during World War II, is gearing up after a slow start, the Scandinavians, togheter with the Italians took the lead early on and has almost completed their evacuation. The US,UK and Australia has been late starters. The US, which had about 25 000 citizens in Lebanon has evacuted about 8000 as of yet. The UK ordered two war ships to evacuate their citizens to Cyprus, and the Australians has sent their team to Beirut.

Most of the 80 0000 Sri Lankan, and the 30 000 Filipino citizens are stuck in Beirut . Most of them , women working as maids in lebanese homes, don´t have choice, their employers will not let them leave, and all they can do is to stay put, and hoping for the best.

On the diplomatic front, Secretary of state is going to the Jerusalem on Sunday, and meeting Arab Foreign ministers in Rome, breaking with an old tradition of several previous administrations, in situations like this. Martyn Indyck explains, going to the Arab capitals right now, would send the wrong signals. Rice is carrying a diplomatic bomb with her as a special treat for Israel this time.

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

New ICG report on Kirkuk

Just 10 days after releasing their report on Muqtada as Sadr and the Nahdi army, ICG releases a report on the current situation in Kirkuk, it´s called Iraq and the Kurds, the brewing battle over Kirkuk

Monday, July 17, 2006

Baghdad survivors, wounds of a war

In a interactive feature, the talanted Farah Nosh gives us the real story behind the war, the people who have lost limbs, loved ones and the ability to lead a ¨normal life¨ in the midst of the Baghdad inferno, that is the usual rhytm of the city nowadays. The phrase ¨a picture says more than a thousand words¨ tends too be overstated at times, but this time it really show´s the power of photo journalism.

In another development, what seems like a 180 degree´s turn around, the sunni politica and religious leadership looks more and more like tilting toward´s a shift in policy on the American troop withdrawal. Amid the sectarian violence, raging and intensifying for every week, they now seem increasingly too look to the Americans for protection. The demands for the Americans to leave, has changed to a demand for a timetable. In the meantime, the shíites seems to view the process of integrating the sunnis into Iraq´s body politic with suspicion, being the principal beneficary of the new political system, they tend to view American attempts to achieve this goal as appeasement of the insurgency, at the expense of the new found democracy. Even the most critical seems eager to let the american troops stay put for the time being, as ilustrated by this comment from the Islamic party official in charge of human rights questions, Omar al Jubouri:

“The problem is that American crimes are only a hundredth of the crimes committed by the militias,” said Omar al-Jubouri, the human rights officer for the Iraqi Islamic Party, a powerful Sunni group that still considers itself the vanguard of political resistance to the Americans. “It’s like one hair compared to all the other hairs on a camel.”

“We want to tell the American people to increase the presence of the Americans here, to control the situation,”
Ed Wong and Dexter Filkins has more on this in today´s New York Times

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

ICG report on Muqtada as Sadr

International Crisis Group has just released it´s new report on Muqtada as Sadr and his Mahdi Army, the report comes at a time, when the sectarian violence is a daily routine, quickly escalating, when you thought that it couldn´t get any worse. The latest casualties was 10 people traveling in a minibus in a suburb of Baghdad, en route to Najaf with a coffin of a diceased, to bury the body in the shíite holy shrine city with the Wadi as Salam cemetry, the holiest place to bury your dead in shiíte tradition.

here follows the executive summary and recommendations. You can download the full report in PDF or as a word document.

Iraq’s Muqtada Al-Sadr: Spoiler or Stabiliser?
Middle East Report N°55
11 July 2006

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS

With stepped-up U.S.-led raids against Muqtada al-Sadr’s militia, Jaysh al-Mahdi, and media allegations of the militia’s responsibility for widespread and particularly horrendous sectarian killings in Baghdad on 9 July, the Shiite leader and his movement have become more central than ever. The war in Iraq radically reshuffled the country’s political deck, bringing to the fore new actors and social forces, none more surprising and enigmatic, and few as critical to Iraq’s stability, as Muqtada al-Sadr and the Sadrist movement he embodies. Largely unknown prior to the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime and bereft of resources Shiites typically must possess to assert their authority, Muqtada al-Sadr at first was dismissed as a marginal rabble-rouser, excluded from the political process and, after he flexed his muscles, decreed wanted “dead or alive” by the U.S.-led coalition. Learning the hard way, the U.S. and its allies have had to recognise the reality of the Sadrists’ strength.

Today, the Sadrists play a central part in government and parliament. The young imam enjoys a cult-like following among Shiite masses. How his forces act will be vital to the country’s future. The Sadrist movement has deep roots, and its demands reflect many justified grievances. The key is to ensure that Muqtada helps bring the Sadrists and their social base fully into the political process. For that, he will have to be treated as a legitimate, representative actor and act as one.

The most puzzling aspect of Muqtada’s ascent is that he possesses none of the more obvious criteria of political success and little that can account for the existence and resilience of his social base. Although coming from a prominent family, he is neither particularly charismatic nor a particularly adept speaker. He does not enjoy the backing of a party apparatus. He has few religious credentials. By most accounts, even his material assets are scanty: by and large, he is excluded from the financial networks controlled by the Shiite clerical class and is not truly aligned with any foreign sponsor, receiving at best limited material support from Iran. Likewise, the Sadrists are not a typical political movement. They have neither a coherent nor consistent agenda, and neither experienced nor identifiable leaders and advisers. Especially during the occupation’s first two years, the young imams that led the movement were inexperienced, displaying far more zeal than political wisdom.

For all these reasons, the Sadrists early on were dismissed as an irrelevant aberration with little purchase on the nation’s future. The coalition and its Iraqi partners considered Muqtada’s behaviour inconsistent, his judgment erratic, his discourse radical and his movement chaotic. Underestimating him proved costly; between April and August 2004, it led to deadly confrontation between his followers and coalition forces.

The origins of this miscalculation are straightforward. Heavily relying on former exiles, the U.S. built a political process from which it was easy to exclude Muqtada. It was not so easy to exclude him from his social base. Muqtada enjoyed significant popular backing and a power base in the Shiite slums of Baghdad, the city of Kufa, and the governorate of Maysan. His followers, for the most part impoverished Shiites, are remarkably determined and loyal. Muqtada secured strong legitimacy in the eyes of his constituency, far stronger in fact than that of Shiite personalities coopted by the coalition. He has become the authentic spokesman of a significant portion of traditionally disenfranchised Iraqis who, far from benefiting from the former regime’s ouster, remained marginalised from the emerging political order.

His outlook also proved appealing, as he was at the cross section of disparate, seemingly contradictory stances. He consistently denounced the occupation and displayed sympathy for the armed opposition while simultaneously participating in the political process the U.S. set up and which the armed groups combat. His movement is profoundly Shiite, but his nationalistic discourse, resistance to the occupation, hostility toward other Shiite actors (the clerical establishment in Najaf and the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI)) and opposition to federalism have earned him respect from some Sunni Arabs. His rejection of an autonomous southern, predominantly Shiite, state and his reluctance to compromise with the Kurds on the status of Kirkuk, together with the strength of his armed militia, Jaysh al-Mahdi, have put him at the centre of issues critical to the future of the political process: negotiations over the constitution, agreement over the status of Kurdistan, the eventual dismantling and disarming of militias and the timing of coalition forces’ withdrawal. Moreover, Muqtada has begun to acquire regional standing, having displayed surprising diplomatic skill during an early 2006 tour of neighbouring countries.

Seen by many as a spoiler, his political positioning and legitimacy in the eyes of a restless, disenfranchised population have made Muqtada a key to Iraq’s stability, and he must be treated as such. But Muqtada must do more to exercise responsible leadership himself. As sectarian tensions have grown, so too has his movement’s involvement in the dirty war that pits Sunnis against Shiites. Muqtada has maintained his calls for national unity, even in the wake of particularly vicious attacks against Shiite civilians, yet the February 2006 attack against a Shiite shrine in Samarra appears to have been a turning point. Since then, the violence has reached alarming proportions as Sadrists have indiscriminately attacked presumed Baathists and Wahhabis. Controlling his forces and putting an end to their killings is Muqtada’s principal challenge. Should he fail to meet it, he will be partly responsible for two things he ardently claims he wishes to avoid: the country’s fragmentation and an Islamic civil war.

RECOMMENDATIONS

To Muqtada al-Sadr and the Sadrist Movement:

1. Take vigorous steps to end attacks by Jaysh al-Mahdi against Sunni Arabs by:

(a) clearly and unambiguously condemning all sectarian-based killings, whether committed by Sunnis or Shiites;

(b) banning reprisal killings against former regime elements; and

(c) strengthening control over Jaysh al-Mahdi, including by taking strong disciplinary action in the event of such sectarian-based or politically-motivated killings.

2. Promote initiatives along the lines of the Mahdi institute aimed at increasing discipline among Sadrist militants, enforcing their respect for the rules of war and better defining their role and mission.

To Najaf-based Clerics:

3. Facilitate Sadr’s reestablishment in Najaf’s Holy City by:

(a) authorising the reopening of a Sadrist headquarters near Imam Ali’s shrine;

(b) encouraging Sadrists to take classes offered by the Hawza; and

(c) gradually integrating Jaysh al-Mahdi members into the city’s SCIRI-dominated security forces.

To the Iraqi Government:

4. Rapidly reform the de-Baathification program to offer credible judicial recourse against individuals accused of committing crimes under the former regime.

5. Make it clear that demobilisation of all militias remains the goal but adopt a gradualist approach toward Jaysh al-Mahdi, by:

(a) focusing for now on circumscribing its functional and geographic area of operations to protecting civilians and engaging in social activities in Sadrist strongholds, while taking strong action against any political assassinations, sectarian-based attacks or checkpoints outside Sadrist zones; and

(b) postponing any attempt at coercive disarmament until national security forces are in a position to ensure safety in Sadrist strongholds.

To the U.S. Government:

6. Support steps taken by the Iraqi government toward the Sadrists consistent with recommendations 4 and 5 above.

7. Act vigorously to end all violations by U.S. forces of the Geneva Conventions as a prerequisite to encouraging respect for the rules of war among Iraqi security forces and all paramilitary organisations.