Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Iraq
Iraqi PM vows to defeat insurgent groups
2014-06-15
[Iraq Sun] Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki vowed to defeat the insurgent groups as troops and volunteers gathered in Samarra city to fight the militants trying to march toward capital city Baghdad.

"Samarra is not the last line, but it will be a gathering point and a launch pad to clear all areas," Xinhua quoted Maliki as saying in a speech broadcast Saturday, made during his visit to Samarra late Friday.

"Hundreds of thousands of volunteers are with you. It is only hours to the volunteers to arrive to support the security forces in their war against the gangs of Daash (Arabic first letters of the Islamic State in Iraq and Levant ISIL)," Maliki said at a meeting with military officers and provincial officials late Friday.

Thousands of volunteers responded to a call by the country's most revered Shiite cleric in Iraq Grand Ayatollah Ali al- Sistani, who called on Iraqis Friday to take up arms for defending their country against insurgent groups.

Meanwhile, the Iraqi security forces Saturday re-took control of three towns in Salahudin province lying north of Baghdad, while troops were also being deployed in Tikrit city in the south for a military offensive later, a provincial police source said. The troops backed by residents of Ishaqi town, 90 km from Baghdad, clashed with the militant groups and recaptured the town earlier seized by them, a source said.

Security forces also attacked the nearby town of al- Mu'tasim, 100 km from Baghdad, and seized it from the militants' control, the source added.

The Sunni-dominated Tikrit city, the hometown of former president Saddam Hussein, has been in the gunmen's hands since Wednesday.
Link


Iraq
Sistani, Mookie meet
2007-01-08
NAJAF, Iraq, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Radical young Shi'ite cleric and militia leader Moqtada al-Sadr met the reclusive spiritual leader of Iraq's Shi'ite majority, Grand Ayatollah Ali al- Sistani, on Sunday, aides to Sadr said. The reason for their first meeting in more than a year was not clear.
It annoints Mookie.
The talks at Sistani's residence in the holy city of Najaf are part of delicate power relationships among the Islamist leaders of Iraq's now dominant Shi'ite majority, all of whom acknowledge Sistani's role as patron of their movement. An aide to Sadr, Issam al-Moussawi, said the meeting was "cordial" and touched on "the security and political situation".
It unfortunately prob'ly didn't convey the message to Mookie of 'sit down and shut up'.
Sadr's political bloc is part of Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's national unity government but has been boycotting cabinet and parliament for the past month in protest at Maliki's renewal of the U.N. mandate for the U.S. forces.

Sadr's Mehdi Army militia is blamed by U.S. and some Iraqi officials for some of the worst sectarian violence afflicting Baghdad and other parts of the country, although Sadr himself has pretended to disowned groups carrying out death squad killings.

Maliki announced on Saturday a major crackdown in Baghdad on armed groups "regardless of sect", suggesting he may be ready to move against some Mehdi Army groups after months of resisting pressure from Washington and minority Sunni leaders to do so.

Sistani is the sponsor of the United Alliance bloc to which Sadr, Maliki and the other main Shi'ite political leaders belong. He has urged Shi'ites not to employ violence, although the rise in sectarian bloodshed over the past year has demonstrated that they aren't listening highlighted the limits of his authority.
Link


Iraq
Ayatollah Sistani on the Mohammed Cartoons
2006-02-07
In Iraq, the country's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al- Sistani, decried the drawings but did not call for protests.

"We strongly denounce and condemn this horrific action," he said in a statement posted on his Web site and dated Tuesday.

Al-Sistani, who wields enormous influence over Iraq's majority Shiites, made no call for protests and suggested that militant Muslims were partly to blame for distorting Islam's image.

He referred to "misguided and oppressive" segments of the Muslim community and said their actions "projected a distorted and dark image of the faith of justice, love and brotherhood."

He recognizes that this violent overreaction makes Islam look bad. He may is also taking a poke at Sadr, who seems to be working directly with Syria and Iran to stir the pot.

"Enemies have exploited this ... to spread their poison and revive their old hatreds with new methods and mechanisms," he said.

Link


Iraq-Jordan
Iraqis Spit in America's Face
2005-02-07
U.S. 'in for a shock'
In early election results, Shiite cleric's alliance trouncing Washington's favorite
- Borzou Daragahi, Chronicle (San Francisco) Foreign Service
Friday, February 4, 2005

Frankly, if I had my way, Mecca, Medina, Riyadh, Pashto-Garbagistan/Waziristan, Karbala, Najaf and Qom would have looked like the Moon, by about September 18, 2001. And US-UK flags would be flying over the entire Red Sea and Persian Gulf to Kirkuk oil-patches, as US taxpayers would have enjoyed huge budget surpluses, without having to worry about over 1500 holes in their family trees. Still the shiny-happy majority think that "freedom" is served by propping proto-Islamofascists in the Afghan and Iraq gutter entities. It might take a year, but you will be educated by the school-of-hard-knocks-to-fat-heads.

Baghdad -- Partial results from Sunday's election suggest that U.S.-backed Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's coalition is being roundly defeated by a list with the backing of Iraq's senior Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al- Sistani, diminishing Allawi's chances of retaining his post in the next government.
That is: the Iranian born cleric, Sistani.

Sharif Ali bin Hussein, head of the Constitutional Monarchy Party, likened the vote outcome to a "Sistani tsunami" that would shake the nation.

"Americans are in for a shock," he said, adding that one day they would realize, "We've got 150,000 troops here protecting a country that's extremely friendly to Iran, and training their troops."
Golly!

The partial totals so far show the Iraqi List headed by Allawi, a secular Shiite and onetime CIA protege, trailed far behind with only 18 percent of the votes, despite an aggressive television ad campaign waged with U.S. aid. A lopsided majority of votes, 72 percent, went to the United Iraqi Alliance list, topped by a Shiite cleric who lived in Iran for many years and whose Sciri party has close ties to Iran's clerical regime. More than a third of the alliance's vote came from Baghdad, the cosmopolitan capital where Allawi had been expected to fare well.

Although the results are only from Baghdad and five southern provinces where the Shiite parties were expected to score strongly, and from only 10 percent of the country's 5,216 polling stations, the scale of the alliance's vote underscored the probability of a historic shift in the Shiites' favor from decades of Sunni minority rule in Iraq.

Safwat Rashid, a member of Iraq's Independent Election Commission, and international election officials warned observers not to read too much into the early numbers, which did not include tallies in the country's Sunni or Kurdish provinces.

Rashid said the Baghdad numbers came from "mixed" -- meaning Sunni and Shiite -- neighborhoods in the city where Allawi was expected to perform well. Hussein said Allawi had also performed poorly in Babil province, a relatively urbanized, mixed Shiite-Sunni area south of Baghdad.

He said the vote total and the total turnout numbers wouldn't be known for another 10 days.

Already, Western officials in Baghdad appeared to be downplaying worries about the possible victory by the alliance, topped by Abdel Aziz al-Hakim, a cleric who spent years exiled in Iran.

The alliance "is a very diverse group of people, from Westernized independents to Sunni sheikhs to people who really believe in an Islamic state, " one Western diplomat speaking on condition of anonymity said of the alliance on Wednesday. "It will be hard to maintain unity."

The election commission also released final vote tallies from overseas voters in eight countries, the United States, Britain, France, Iran, Syria, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and Australia. The alliance won of 44 percent of the 170,000 votes cast in those countries, the Kurds 18 percent and Allawi's list 12 percent. In U.S. voting, Allawi garnered just 5 percent of the vote, less than the Communist Party total...
So US Iraqis say Eff US. Ergo...?

Anyone have a cure for Denial-Fever?
Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-4 More