Since January 6th, when Juan Cole first spoke of the Sunni's concern about Shiite power, I've been wondering what their concern was. Since last July I've been writing about how Iran will be the greatest beneficiary of the US invasion of Iraq, since political power will shift to the Shiites. Iran has been flexing its muscles lining up new customers for its oil and marching towards the nuclear club. Truly, I'm sure part of the Sunni's concern is about the dream of a future World Caliphet with Sunni leaders might instead be Shiite leaders. But here Juan's wife(?) Shahin Cole says its mostly about religion.
[Informed Comment]
Guest Editorial: Sunni Anxieties and the Rise of Shiite Power by Shahin M. Cole
Sunni Anxieties and the Rise of Shiite Power
Shahin M. Cole
Iraq after its elections is not out of the woods, and some severe dangers loom ahead. Iraq has had the form of elections, but will it have the substance of democracy? Can candidates who were afraid to reveal their identities before the election now be secure in doing so afterwards? Will not the members of the new parliament become immediate targets for kidnapping and assassination?
Moreover, now comes the hard part of drafting a permanent constitution in a way that meets the expectations of all the major groups in the country. Some substantial portion of them is likely to come away disappointed. What if controversial issues cause the negotiations to bog down? Will the third of the candidates who are women accept the likely attempt of the religious parties to impose religious codes in family law? Can a way be found to mollify the Sunni Arabs, who will be highly underrepresented in the parliament, and the legitimacy of which they are unlikely grant?
Far from seeing the elections as a good thing to be emulated, the Sunni Arab neighbors of Iraq are likely to be alarmed at the rise of Shiite dominance. They will also be disturbed at any close Shiite-American alliance. Wahhabis in Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and Salafi fundamentalists elsewhere in the Gulf (including Iraq itself), deeply disapprove of Shiite doctrine and practice.
The Sunni Arab Iraqis declined to vote in any numbers not just because of the poor security situation, but out of conviction. Many feel that you cannot have free and fair elections under foreign military occupation. They would also be within their rights to argue that voting procedures were stacked against them. The interim government allowed Iraqi expatriates who have taken citizenship in other countries to vote. Since most expatriates are Shiites, Kurds and Chaldeans, moreover, allowing expatriates to vote in this election might well be viewed as harming Sunni interests. The US has in the past forbidden its nationals (except, after 1967, those with dual citizenship) to vote in elections in other countries, and has threatened to strip them of their citizenship if they did. Were all Iraqi-Americans who voted actually dual citizens? Is this step a permanent change in US procedure?
The Gulf monarchies are afraid of the Khomeini-inspired trend in Shiism to say that "there can be no kings in Islam." If these Sunni hardliners had an "axis of evil", the Shiites of Iraq and Iran would be in it. Many Sunnis fear Shiite power more than they ever feared Saddam's predations. Many of them also view the United States as an imperial power in the region. A Shiite-American alliance is their worst nightmare, and many of them will see the Iraqi Shiites as puppets of the US. The elections, which the Bush administration sees as the solution to a whole host of problems, have upset the sectarian balance of power in the Middle East, and may well bring new kinds of instability in their train.
The differences and conflicts between the Wahhabi branch of Islam (prevalent in Saudi Arabia and Qatar) and Sunnis (who account for ninety percent of the world's Muslims) are not widely appreciated. Sunnis and Wahhabis have often been at odds. The rise of a Shiite-dominated Iraq supported by American power could well create new alliances between Sunnis and Wahhabis that will radicalize both. The US CIA is already predicting that Iraq is becoming the new training ground for international terrorism.

Abdulrahim Murad who arrived here Sunday for a four-day visit. Shamkhani hailed the visit, saying it indicates the two countries' perception of the regional developments and the need for creation of a united regional (front) against common threats. "Iran believes one of the effective ways in confronting expansionist ambitions of the world arrogance and the Zionist regime is to strengthen convergence and unity among regional countries," he said.
STEVE SCHLICH, NAKED WASHINGTON - In February 2002, the Justice Department spent $8,000 on curtains to cover up one Art Deco aluminum breast. At that rate, it would cost millions to censor the hundreds of private parts on public display in Washington, D.C.-and none of them are real. The whole concept is offensive to me. . . like pulling a burka over free speech. But rather than scream about it. . . I flew to Washington and photographed over a hundred different subjects around the capital-mostly outdoor sculpture. The place is a virtual den of iniquity! In a leisurely single day, you can visit:




