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Shiite Happens

Fouad Ajami, writing in the WSJ’s Opinion Journal, examines Sunni fear over imminent Shiite emancipation. From “Heart of Darkness”:

The drumbeats against Iraq that originate from the League of Arab States and its Egyptian apparatchiks betray the panic of an old Arab political class afraid that there is something new unfolding in Iraq–a different understanding of political power and citizenship, a possible break with the culture of tyranny and the cult of Big Men disposing of the affairs–and the treasure–of nations. It is pitiable that an Egyptian political class that has abdicated its own dream of modernity and bent to the will of a pharaonic regime is obsessed with the doings in Iraq. But this is the political space left open by the master of the realm. To be sure, there is terror in the streets of Iraq; there is plenty there for the custodians of a stagnant regime in Cairo to point to as a cautionary tale of what awaits societies that break with “secure” ways. But the Egyptian autocracy knows the stakes. An Iraqi polity with a modern social contract would be a rebuke to all that Egypt stands for, a cruel reminder of the heartbreak of Egyptians in recent years. We must not fall for Cairo’s claims of primacy in Arab politics; these are hollow, and Iraq will further expose the rot that has settled upon the political life of Egypt.

Nor ought we be taken in by warnings from Jordan, made by King Abdullah II, of a “Shia crescent” spanning Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. This is a piece of bigotry and simplification unworthy of a Hashemite ruler, for in the scheme of Arab history the Hashemites have been possessed of moderation and tolerance. Of all Sunni Arab rulers, the Hashemites have been particularly close to the Shiites, but popular opinion in Jordan has been thoroughly infatuated with Saddam Hussein, and Saddamism, and an inexperienced ruler must have reasoned that the Shiite bogey would play well at home.

The truth of Jordan today is official moderation coupled with a civic culture given to anti-Americanism, and hijacked by the Islamists.

[…]

It was the luck of the imperial draw that the American project in Iraq came to the rescue of the Shiites–and of the Kurds. We may not fully appreciate the historical change we unleashed on the Arab world, but we have given liberty to the stepchildren of the Arab world. We have overturned an edifice of material and moral power that dates back centuries. The Arabs railing against U.S. imperialism and arrogance in Iraq will never let us in on the real sources of their resentments. In the way of “modern” men and women with some familiarity with the doctrines of political correctness, they can’t tell us that they are aggrieved that we have given a measure of self-worth to the seminarians of Najaf and the highlanders of Kurdistan. But that is precisely what gnaws at them.

An edifice of Arab nationalism built by strange bedfellows–the Sunni political and bureaucratic elites, and the Christian Arab pundits who abetted them in the idle hope that they would be spared the wrath of the street and of the mob–was overturned in Iraq. And America, at times ambivalent about its mission, brought along with its military gear a suspicion of the Shiites, a belief that the Iraqi Shiites were an extension of Iran, a community destined to build a sister-republic of the Iranian theocracy. Washington has its cadre of Arabists reared on Arab nationalist historiography. This camp had a seat at the table, but the very scale of what was at play in Iraq, and the redemptionism at the heart of George Bush’s ideology, dwarfed them.

[…]

Zarqawi’s jihadists have sown ruin in Iraq, but they are strangers to that country, and they have needed the harbor given them in the Sunni triangle and the indulgence of the old Baathists. For the diehards, Iraq is now a “stolen country” delivered into the hands of subject communities unfit to rule. Though a decided minority, the Sunni Arabs have a majoritarian mindset and a conviction that political dominion is their birthright. Instead of encouraging a break with the old Manichaean ideologies, the Arab world beyond Iraq feeds this deep-seated sense of historical entitlement. No one is under any illusions as to what the Sunni Arabs would have done had oil been located in their provinces. They would have disowned both north and south and opted for a smaller world of their own and defended it with the sword. But this was not to be, and their war is the panic of a community that fears that it could be left with a realm of “gravel and sand.”

[…]

We have not always been brilliant in the war we have waged, for these are lands we did not fully know. But our work has been noble and necessary, and we can’t call a halt to it in midstream. We bought time for reform to take root in several Arab and Muslim realms. Leave aside the rescue of Afghanistan, Kuwait and Qatar have done well by our protection, and Lebanon has retrieved much of its freedom. The three larger realms of Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria are more difficult settings, but there, too, the established orders of power will have to accommodate the yearnings for change […]

In that Iraqi battleground, we can’t yet say that the insurgency is in its death throes. But that call to war by Zarqawi, we must know, came after the stunning military operation in Tal Afar dealt the jihadists a terrible blow. An Iraqi-led force, supported by American tanks, armored vehicles and air cover, had stormed that stronghold. This had been a transit point for jihadists coming in from Syria. This time, at Tal Afar, Iraq security forces were there to stay, and a Sunni Arab defense minister with the most impeccable tribal credentials, Saadoun Dulaimi, issued a challenge to Iraq’s enemy, a message that his soldiers would fight for their country.

The claim that our war in Iraq, after the sacrifices, will have hatched a Shiite theocracy is a smear on the war, a misreading of the Shiite world of Iraq. In the holy city of Najaf, at its apex, there is a dread of political furies and an attachment to sobriety. I went to Najaf in July; no one of consequence there spoke of a theocratic state. Najaf’s jurists lived through a time of terror, when informers and assassins had the run of the place. They have been delivered from that time. The new order shall give them what they want: a place in Iraq’s cultural and moral order, and a decent separation between religion and the compromises of political life.

Over the horizon looms a referendum to ratify the country’s constitution. Sunni Arabs are registering in droves, keen not to repeat the error they committed when they boycotted the national elections earlier this year. In their pride, and out of fear of the insurgents and their terror, the Sunni Arabs say that they are registering to vote in order to thwart this “illegitimate constitution.” This kind of saving ambiguity ought to be welcomed, for there are indications that the Sunni Arabs may have begun to understand terror’s blindness and terror’s ruin. Zarqawi holds out but one fate for them; other doors beckon, and there have stepped forth from their ranks leaders eager to partake of the new order. It is up to them, and to the Arab street and the Arab chancelleries that wink at them, to bring an end to the terror. It has not been easy, this expedition to Iraq, and for America in Iraq there has been heartbreak aplenty. But we ought to remember the furies that took us there, and we ought to be consoled by the thought that the fight for Iraq is a fight to ward off Arab dangers and troubles that came our way on a clear September morning, four years ago.

In Ajami’s world (as in George Bush’s world, it should be noted), the fears of foreign policy realists, along with the historical racism of the Arab nationalists, will be steamrolled by the opportunities attendant to freedom and self-determination.  And if Ajami and Bush are correct, the example of Iraq will indeed—the sneers of cynics and skeptics and hysterics notwithstanding—upset the years of established structural beliefs that have kept the Arab world suffering tyranny for the sake of “stability.”

****

(h/t Terry Hastings)

10 Replies to “Shiite Happens”

  1. Chrees says:

    It appears there is some truth to Said’s “the other,” but not even close to the way he meant it. It works within the Arab world itself, between different political and religious groups.

  2. rls says:

    Zarqawi holds out but one fate for them; other doors beckon, and there have stepped forth from their ranks leaders eager to partake of the new order.

    More Iraqi’s every day are seeing this.  Whenever success in Iraq is achieved, it will be by the will of the average Iraqi, be they, Sunni, Shia, Turk or Christain.

  3. Major John says:

    I wish more people would flat out ask the “anti-war” crowd if they are comfortable shoving the “other” back into the dungeon of Sunni domination.

  4. Mikey says:

    The stability the realists pine for is the steady, firm hand on the tiller of the nation, directing all of its energies to some glorious goal of a chin-lifted-gazing-into-the-future-like-a-1930’s-mural life.

    In truth, that firm hand is the strangling grip of authoritarianism, and when it has in its clutch the political, religious, economic, and social life of a nation it leads to the trashcanistan of the Soviet Union and the muslim middle-east today.

  5. Charlie (Colorado) says:

    …the example of Iraq will indeed—the sneers of cynics and skeptics and hysterics notwithstanding—upset the years of established structural beliefs that have kept the Arab world suffering tyranny for the sake of “stability.”

    Yes.

  6. steve says:

    “Shiite Happens?”

    I think CAIR’s lawyers are trying to call you right now, you rascist!

    -Steve

  7. Darth Rovian says:

    Nah. CAIR doesn’t care about Shiites. But CAIR will protest this promotion of a person they consider a self-hating traitor to Arabs and Islam (notwithstanding Ajami is a Shiite himself) who has sold his soul to the American imperialist Zionist anti-Islamic racist conspiracy.

  8. Dog (Lost) says:

    Even with the defeatism of the MSM hammering away every day, I just cannot imagine that the average Joe in the Arab world would actually choose fear and subservience over the slightest whiff of freedom. This post is excellent.

  9. Holepocrite says:

    I saw this on RCP, what a great essay. 

    Thanks for posting it.  Everyone should read this.

  10. spongeworthy says:

    Ditto. Post of the month, G.

    Maybe because I needed a pep talk.

Comments are closed.