Baghdad
The Imam Al-Ridha neighborhood in north Baghdad is one of the city's
newest. Its houses have been hastily constructed of cinderblocks, and
the streets are unpaved. There are fifty-five families here already,
and more are on the way. At the entrance to the neighborhood a
photo-mural depicts recent Shiite tragedies: the death of more than
1,000 people during a pilgrimage in 2005, the burial of martyrs during
uprisings against the US military in 2004 and the end of the 1991
uprising against Saddam Hussein, with his military occupying a holy
shrine.
The neighborhood itself is a testament to an event that is not
depicted: All the families here have left their homes in other parts of
central Iraq, fleeing escalating sectarian violence. "One of my
neighbors, a Sunni, came to me and said, 'I advise you to leave this
area,'" says Abu Ali, who left his home of fifteen years in Taji, about
forty-five minutes north of the capital, for Imam Al-Ridha two months
ago, after his brother was abducted.
The problems in Taji, a mixed city with a Sunni majority, began shortly
after the US invasion. "We thought the American soldiers came here to
protect us," Abu Ali says. "So when someone would plant a bomb or try
to attack them, we would tell the Americans." Providing aid to the
occupier quickly led to retribution from the Sunni resistance. But the
violence has escalated since December's elections, and again following
the destruction of the Shiite Askariya shrine in Samarra in February.
In the past two months tens of thousands have fled.
The mural at the entrance to Imam Al-Ridha also includes a picture of
Muqtada al-Sadr. The neighborhood, and many others like it, is adjacent
to tightly packed Sadr City, which is home to millions and comprises
the cleric's power base. "The only people who help us are the Mahdi
Army," says Naim Hussein, referring to the loosely organized militia
that is loyal to Sadr and in the past two years has engaged in actions
ranging from battling the US military to cleaning up garbage. "They
bring us gas, water and food. We don't have any money, we don't have
any jobs. We were farmers."
Bordering Sadr City to the west is Shoala, another poor Shiite
neighborhood that is nearly as large. In 2004 Sunni families fleeing
the US military's siege of Falluja came east to Shoala, where they
received assistance from Sadrist mosques. Now the refugee tide has
changed, and the 2004 cooperation between Sunni guerrillas and the
Mahdi Army against the United States appears to have fully
disintegrated. Since the Askariya bombing, the Sadr office in Shoala
has registered more than 700 Shiite families seeking assistance, most
of them in early April. The other major Sadr office, in Sadr City, has
seen similar numbers.
In Chikook, another collection of cinderblock houses, this one on
Shoala's south border, families drive up in the pouring rain, all their
belongings loaded into trucks and minivans. Some are staying in their
cars until houses can be built, others are crowded into the dwellings
of families that have been here longer. The people in Chikook say the
Sadr office pointed them toward vacant lots and that the Mahdi Army
provides protection for those who have recently settled here.
Most of the families in Chikook are from Haswa, a Shiite village near
Abu Ghraib, southwest of Baghdad. The men say there was a progression:
First they became afraid to go to work; eventually, they decided it was
time to leave. "A hundred families have left in the last two days,"
says Abu Muhammad. "A hundred, maybe 200 more, are coming in the next
week."
Everyone I speak with seems to have left after losing a family member
or a neighbor. The form in the Sadr office actually includes--along
with lines for names, place of former residence and other vital data--a
line that reads: "______ was killed." Abu Hakki, who arrived with Abu
Muhammad, says he left after witnessing people getting shot in the car
in front of him while on the road between Abu Ghraib and Baghdad. "They
stopped the car and took five men out of it and killed them and injured
five because they are Shiites and because they worked for a government
company," he says.
The predominantly Sunni neighborhood of Ghazalia is next door, across
one of the many front lines in what appears to be a widening civil war.
Many Shiites blame the United States for fanning sectarian flames. At
the March 31 Friday prayers in Sadr City, worshipers chanted, "No, no
to America!" Muhammad al-Attab al-Tabaee, a Sadr aide, reiterated the
cleric's call to his followers to "ignore US provocations," adding,
"the United States makes sectarianism." After the April 7 bombing of
the Shiite mosque in Baratha, which killed at least seventy-one,
Muqtada al-Sadr blamed America for the troubles besetting Iraq. Some
Shiites go so far as to claim that the mosque bombings are part of a US
destabilization campaign.
Back in Abu Ali's sparse living room, the conversation turns to
politics. "During the first election [in January 2005], the Shiites
were the only people who came to vote," says Shaheed Hussein Kassim,
who lost his sons and his brother to Sunni insurgents. "Why does
America hate Shiites?" As further proof of what they see as American
enmity, the men offer recent statements by US ambassador Zalmay
Khalilzad, who was critical of both Sadr and Ibrahim al-Jaafari, the
interim prime minister whom Sadr's political party supports for
permanent appointment. (In the December elections, the broad Shiite
bloc, the United Iraqi Alliance, won a plurality in the polling and
thus the right to select the prime minister. After intense negotiations
within the bloc, Jaafari, with the support of Sadr's Tayyera Sadriyyin,
won by one vote over the candidate of the Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRI. But now Jaafari must receive the
support of two-thirds of the entire Parliament before he can take
office. A bloc of Sunnis, Kurds and now Shiites from SCIRI have stalled
his appointment.)
The early April visit to Baghdad by US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice and British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw did little to calm
leaders, who complain that the United States is meddling in Iraqi
politics. Reports that Khalilzad told SCIRI leader Abdul Aziz al-Hakim
that Washington did not support Jaafari have further angered many
Shiites. Khalilzad used the press conference in which he announced the
release of kidnapped US journalist Jill Carroll to deny that he made
such statements before walking out without taking questions from
reporters. But Khalilzad has already become public enemy number one in
the eyes of the Sadriyyin and other Shiites, some of whom have begun
referring to him (a Sunni Afghan) as "Abu Omar," a reference to a Sunni
caliph in the seventh century who fought Shiites. Some clerics have
called openly for Khalilzad's expulsion from the country.
Jawad al-Maliky, Ibrahim Jaafari's deputy in the Dawa Party, is blunt
when asked about Khalilzad's denial. "He lied," Maliky says. "It is
dangerous if he remains here. He endangers our democracy and he creates
sectarianism. He will cost the United States our cooperation. If
Jaafari is forced out, there will be problems in Iraq. Khalilzad wants
more fighting."
Jaafari's removal could sink the already stalled political process. The
Sadriyyin have threatened to boycott the government if his nomination
is overturned. Members of the Mahdi Army use the Shiite honorific
"Sayyed Jaafari" in referring to him, though he does not wear cleric's
garb (Jaafari is, like Sadr, technically a descendent of the Prophet
Muhammad, according to Shiite tradition). He was also a student of
Muhammad Bakr al-Sadr, Muqtada's uncle and the founder of the Dawa
Party, who was assassinated by Saddam Hussein in 1980. "If Ibrahim
Jaafari leaves the government, the Mahdi Army will leave the
government," says Abu Ali Tamimi, a Mahdi Army commander in Sadr City.
"The US is afraid of Jaafari because he is supported by Tayyera
Sadriyyin."
Against this backdrop of political gridlock, bodies continue to turn up
on the streets of Baghdad every day, the victims of sectarian
assassinations. Sadr has officially called on his militia to not attack
Sunnis, but young, unemployed men are notoriously hard to control. Just
as Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's ranking Shiite cleric, could not
immediately convince the Mahdi Army to end its rebellion in Najaf and
Baghdad against the US military in 2004, killings of Sunnis in Sadr's
name seem to be taking place regardless of whether Sistani approves.
"The Mahdi Army does not have one leader," says Nadher Yassin Mahmoud,
a Sunni imam at Rashid Dragh Mosque on Baghdad's west side. Two of his
friends, imams at other Sunni mosques, have been killed, Mahmoud says.
He is making plans to move to Dubai soon. "My friend was an imam in
Zafraniya -- he had a very good relationship with the Mahdi Army. Some
of them came to him and asked him to leave. They said, 'We are your
friends, and we do not want anything to happen to you.' He asked why,
and they just said, 'We don't want anything bad to happen to you.' He
left. Two days later the mosque was shot up."
Nadher and other Sunnis also blame America for stoking sectarian
tensions. Nadher refers to a message that scrolled down Iraqi TV
screens recently that read, "The Ministry of Defense requests that
civilians do not comply with the orders of the army or police on
nightly patrols unless they are accompanied by coalition forces working
in that area." Referring to the neighborhood militias that have
appeared in Sunni areas, Nadher says, "One of my friends was on the
street guarding his mosque and the US military passed by and told him
this. They want us to fight with each other."
Mahdi commander Tamimi does not deny that rogue Mahdi elements are
carrying out assassinations. "We have had to remove many people from
the Mahdi Army," he says. "They are fighting for their sect; they don't
care about Muqtada al-Sadr." But Sadr's own language has created a
serious gray area, perhaps intentionally. He has approved killing of
"takfiris"--Sunni extremists who consider Shiites heretics--and former
Baathists. In his talks to members of the Mahdi Army, he makes it clear
that he believes Sunni members of the government fall into these
categories. "Saleh Mutlaq--he was a member of the Baath Party," Tamimi
says of one of the most prominent Sunni politicians in the government.
He also criticizes the Iraqi Islamic Party, one of the main Sunni
political parties. "If they are good people, why don't they condemn the
killing of Shiites?"
The US military may still be the greatest threat to Muqtada al-Sadr's
ascendance, but many Shiites are now preparing for a widening
confrontation with Sunni extremists. Both fights seem to be coming. The
question of which will come first may be left up to the US military and
its proxies. "On the bus people talk about the American soldiers losing
the war," says Ghaith al-Tamimi, a member of the Sadriyyin press
department. "Someone else must fight the terrorists." But Tamimi does
not hide his disdain for the United States. Smiling broadly, he picks
up a Kalashnikov from one of his guards and cradles it, squinting
through the sight. He then raises it slightly and smiles again. "This
is the only language America understands," he says.
At the "Ocean Cliffs" press center in the Green Zone, Maj. Gen. Rick
Lynch, the US military's Baghdad spokesman, says that dealing with the
militias is the US Army's next task in securing Iraq. "Militias are
wrong. Militias are bad for the people of Iraq, and the militias have
to be disbanded," he says. "Militias can't be tolerated, and action has
to be taken." But for now, there is more fighting between the sects
than between the United States and the militias. Skirmishes between
Sunni insurgents and the Mahdi Army have become a feature of life in
some of the cities south of Baghdad, many of which have mixed
populations of roughly equal size.
Khodair Kareem Hussein, who also lives in Imam Al-Ridha, left Mahmoudia
more than two months ago. He returned in late March to empty his bank
account and gather whatever belongings he could. "The Mahdi Army is
facing [the Sunnis]," he says. "But they don't have many weapons and
cannot fight as well. They are also afraid that if they are on the
streets with weapons, the Americans will attack them. If the Americans
would help the Mahdi Army, it would be better. If anyone goes to the US
military, they say, 'It's not our problem. The fighting is between
you.' They say, 'Go to the Iraqi army.'" The specter of George Bush's
betrayal following the 1991 war, in which he encouraged Shiites to rise
up and then allowed Saddam Hussein to crush the rebellion that
followed, looms large in the Shiite consciousness. But this time,
there's no Saddam and no Iraqi air force.
"We are buying more weapons," says Tamimi, the Mahdi Army commander.
"The situation in Iraq is very bad, and we are ready to fight. Saddam
had weapons factories in Abu Ghraib and Ramadi and Falluja. If the
Americans leave, [Sunni insurgents] will have these weapons, and we
don't."
"We are all the army of the Iman [Mahdi Army]," says Naim Hussein, who
lost three cousins in sectarian fighting. "We are waiting for the green
light from our leaders. If there were really a civil war, there would
be no Sunnis left."
David Enders is the author of Baghdad Bulletin (Michigan).
© Copyright 2006 The Nation
###