| 'Democracy' in Iraq |
| By Dahr Jamail | ||||||
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Yesterday, Hassan Nuaimi, high ranking member of the Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS) was found dead in Baghdad. One of his arms was broken and a hole was drilled into the side of his head. This coming the day after the AMS had accused the Shia-led government of state-sponsored terrorism by using the Badr Brigades to murder Sunnis. In response to the murdering of Nuaimi, two Shia clerics were gunned down in Baghdad yesterday. Harith al-Dhari, head of the AMS, blamed the Shia Badr Brigades for the recent spate of killings of Sunni clerics in the country. Dhari, making a statement that could be interpreted as an announcement of civil war, said Sunnis would not keep silent over the killings. "We are heading towards a catastrophe, only God knows when it will end, this is a warning from us," he said angrily. The Badr Brigades were in exile in Iran during much of Saddam's rule, and returned to Iraq after the invasion and have been a fully operational militia in Iraq ever since. I have seen their members in full uniform and with heavy weapons in Baghdad during a Shia demonstration last summer. The Badr Brigades was headed for years by Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, the head of the Shiite United Iraqi Alliance who won the largest percentage of votes in the January 30 "election."There has been a low-grade civil war going on for quite some time-but now the veil has been ripped off by the statements made by Dhari. All Sunni mosques in Iraq will be closed for three days,an ominous symbol of things to come. Thus, any argument that the US military should remain in Iraq to prevent a civil war can be flushed. Besides, anyone arguing that the US military was there to protect the Iraqi people is either blind, in denial, or knows absolutely nothing about the reality on the ground in occupied Iraq. The US military in Iraq are unable even to protect themselves, let alone civilians.
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