Iraq’s leading Shi’ite cleric yesterday appealed for an end to the violence sweeping the country between followers of firebrand Shi’ite cleric Sheik Muqtada al-Sadr and coalition forces.
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani’s statement helped ease fears that the uprising would spread to more moderate Shi’ites, who make up the majority of Iraq’s population. There was no evidence of that happening as of yesterday.
Nevertheless, a number of Shi’ite religious leaders and Iraqi Governing Council members — fearful of a wider conflagration — were pressing the U.S.-led coalition to ease up its assault on Sheik al-Sadr while privately urging the rebel cleric to leave the country or give himself up.
And a Middle East expert with long experience in the region said the United States had better “make plans to hunker down and leave the tents up — because there isn’t anybody else who is going to clean up this mess now.”
Ayatollah al-Sistani, the nation’s most influential Shi’ite leader, broke a three-day silence yesterday with a formal statement decrying “any action that disturbs order and prevents officials from carrying out their duties.”
The reclusive cleric also “condemned the methods used by occupation forces in the current escalating situation in Iraq.”
While the Shi’ite leadership in Iraq is divided between those who sympathize with Sheik al-Sadr’s nationalist rhetoric and those who feel he is an obstacle to their own political agendas, all support Ayatollah al-Sistani’s call for peace.
Sheik al-Sadr’s black-clad Mahdi’s Army has launched an all-out attack against coalition troops, battling soldiers on the streets of several southern Iraqi cities and Baqouba, north of Baghdad.
U.S. Administrator L. Paul Bremer has branded the radical cleric an outlaw, wanted in the murder of the widely revered senior cleric, Ayatollah Abdel Majid al-Khoei in the Shi’ite holy city of Najaf last year.
“After what Mr. Bremer said, they should arrest him,” said Sayed Ayaad Jamaladin, a Shi’ite cleric respected in both Baghdad and Nasiriyah.
“Then these troubles will decrease and will end day by day,” he said in a telephone interview from Baghdad.
“After that, the American forces should work in the strongest way against terrorism and terrorists by arresting them as well as get companies to come to Iraq and create jobs,” Mr. Jamaladin said.
But Azza Karam, a specialist in political Islam and adviser at the World Conference of Religions for Peace, warned that the death or arrest of Sheik al-Sadr would make the 30-year-old cleric a martyr of the Iraqi nationalist movement and raise his stature even higher.
She said “a number of Shi’ite religious leaders are trying to openly negotiate with the [coalition authority], and those on the Governing Council are trying hard to get the United States to take it easy. A minority are behind the actions of the U.S. but they would never openly say so.”
Mrs. Karam said many members of the Governing Council are engaged in “back-door diplomacy” with Sheik al-Sadr and the U.S. government.
“Some back-door negotiations are trying to convince al-Sadr to leave Iraq or give himself in — because how can you possible win against the U.S. Army?”
Having decided to crush Sheik al-Sadr’s violent bid for power, the United States has mired itself much deeper in Iraq’s Islamic politics and future, she added.
“Clearly, there is no going back now,” she said.
Sheik al-Sadr, who rejects the U.S.-appointed Governing Council as a legitimate representative body, has vowed to turn Iraq into another Vietnam for the United States.
“I call upon the American people to stand beside their brethren, the Iraqi people, who are suffering an injustice by your rulers and the occupying army, to help them in the transfer of power to honest Iraqis,” Sheik al-Sadr said in a statement issued by his office in Najaf yesterday.
“Otherwise, Iraq will be another Vietnam for America and the occupiers.”
Although unpopular among mainstream Shi’ites, there were signs of sympathy for the al-Sadr revolt from Sunni insurgents, who have been fighting the U.S.-led occupation for months.
Portraits of Sheik al-Sadr and graffiti praising his “valiant uprising” appeared on mosque and government building walls in the Sunni city of Ramadi, where 12 Marines were killed Tuesday. Peaceful protests in support of Sheik al-Sadr occurred in the northern cities of Mosul and Rashad.
Monday night in Baghdad, al-Sadr gunmen went to a mainly Sunni neighborhood to join with insurgents there in firing on U.S. Humvees — the only known instance so far of Sunni and Shi’ite militants joining forces, the Associated Press reported.
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