graves and the destruction of monuments. The vengeful ghost of Amerli lingers, and the combatants know it.
The role of US forces in the fight for Tikrit has also been noted, with Abbadi requesting US-led air strikes. But Washington is handling its role with some difficulty – it doesn’t want to be seen to be aiding Tehran’s cause either.
The insistence by US forces on conventional Iraqi command and control in such operations is a moot point – the real muscularity in the fight remains with the highly motivated Shia units. The proliferation of coordinated Shia militias, be they in Iraq proper, or in Syria, is proving to be no accident, with vigorous watering taking place from Tehran’s accounts.
Gen David Petraeus, told the Washington Post last month of his looming fears regarding the instability arising from repelling, and expelling Isis. The Islamic State was a violent aberration; the Shiite militias, in contrast, were part of a broader geopolitical power play, a potential open door to Iranian interference in Iraqi affairs.
Admitting that such militia members did effectively restrain the onslaught of Isis after a declared “fatwa by Shia leader Grand Ayatollah Sistani,” he also conceded that their effect was very much like that of an ethnic juggernaut. Sunni fighters, and civilians, have been caught in the whirlwind.
The Sunni-Shia divide in Iraq was papered over by a brutal regime that had, previously, the darkest blessings of western powers. Iran was the satanic enemy of choice, and the rhetoric still pivots on that language: the fear of the Persians with their regional, nuclear-toting aspirations.
Then came the hysterical moralising, the zealotry of regime change by a Washington-led carnival of neoconservatives. As King Abdullah II warned over a decade ago, the removal of Saddam Hussein would precipitate an Iranian-directed “Shia crescent” stretching from Lebanon to Saudi Arabia. The rupture remains, and all sides have a stake in that failure. All that matters is simply minimising such failings in a vicious sectarian calculus.
Excerpted from: ‘Militia woes in Iraq’. Courtesy: Counterpunch.org