Fair
Is Foul And Foul Is Fair In Syria
Saeed Naqvi
Like Henry Kissinger, New York Times
columnist, Thomas L Friedman, belongs to a growing tribe of strategists who
insist that the Palestinian-Israeli conflict has been overshadowed, indeed
overwhelmed, by a much bigger, Shia-Sunni faultline.
Even though Osama bin Laden, the 9/11
hijackers, Wahabism, Salafism, are all traced to Saudi Arabia, the US, Israel
and the West in general have developed a high comfort level with Saudi Arabia regardless.
In this framework, the West has placed the Shia world in opposition to it.
Was it always like this? Consider this recent
historical perspective.
“As we approach the season of the Nobel
Peace Prize, I would like to nominate the spiritual leader of Iraq’s Shiites,
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, for this year’s medal.” The recommendation came
from NYT ace columnist, Friedman. For emphasis, he added: “I’m serious.”
This was in 2005. Friedman, was “in”
with George W. Bush. In ecstatic pieces for the world’s most powerful newspaper,
the NYT, he repeatedly described the occupation of Iraq as history’s greatest
effort at democratization.
Americans had come against Saddam
Hussain, a tough Baathist and atheist by belief and a manufacturer of weapons
of mass destruction. Remember Saddam invoked “Allah” for political mobilization
only after the 1992 operation Desert Storm. He had Allah o Akbar inscribed on
an otherwise secular emblem as an afterthought.
The eclipse of Saddam brought great
relief to Shias in the South – around the holy cities of Najaf, Karbala and oil
rich enclaves neighbouring Basra. For the first time the world realized that
Shias were an overwhelming majority in all of Iraq.
A triangular situation had emerged – the
occupying Americans, Sunni (plus Kurdish) minority and the Shia majority. The
Shias, led by Ayatollah Sistani, played a straight political hand. Once occupation
had taken place, he encouraged the occupiers against his tormentor, Saddam
Hussain.
That is when Friedman was moved to
write:
“If some kind of democracy takes root
here (Iraq), it will also be due in large measure to the instincts and
directives of the dominant Iraqi Shiite communal leader, Ayatollah Sistani.”
“It was Sistani who insisted that the
elections not be postponed in the face of the Baathist-fascist insurgency. And
it was Sistani who ordered Shiites not to retaliate for the Sunni Baathist and
Jihadist attempts to drag them into civil war by attacking Shiite mosques and
massacring Shiite civilians.”
Friedman proceeded to compare the Ayatollah
with other icons who helped bring democracy to their respective countries – Nelson
Mandela and Mikhail Gorbachev. The
quality of democracy that obtains in Russia, Iraq and South must be left for
Friedman to applaud.
Rightly or wrongly, Friedman
extrapolated from his experience in Iraq. This is at a variance from the fraud
Bush’s Defence Secretary, Dick Cheney sought to perpetrate on April 9, 2003,
when he had the marines pull down Saddam Hussain’s state at Firdous square and
attributed the event to a popular uprising.
Friedman zigzagged along shifting convictions,
until by August 2015, he began to show the first signs of tolerating something
so totally different from Sistani as to take one’s breath away. In a
conversation with Barack Obama he appeared to be nodding agreement on a kind of
positive ambiguity about the ISIS.
Sudden and exponential growth of the
Islamic State was something of a mystery. It is in the nature of the post
colonial media that the views of Developing country elites particularly in the
Arab world (except allies like Saudi Arabia, other GCC countries and Jordan)
never get reflected in the media. How did the elites in Iraq, Oman, Yemen,
Syria, Egypt, Iran and other Muslim countries view the IS phenomenon. Without
exception, they described it as an American, French, British, Saudi, Qatari and
Turkish cooperative effort. I know first hand. Ask the ambassadors in New Delhi.
If this is what they thought, why were
they silent? They were not silent, but their protestations were ignored by the
global networks. So hopelessly one sided is the global media, that even shining
stars of independent journalism like Seymour Hersh and Robert Fisk are killed
by a simple trick of being ignored.
Writing on Donald Trump’s proposed visit
to the centres of semitic religions, Riyadh, the Vatican and Jerusalem, Fisk
satirically speculates: “Trump will be able to ask Netanyahu for help against
the IS without – presumably – realizing that Israel bombs only the Syrian army
and the Shia Hezbollah in Syria but has never – ever – bombed IS in Syria. In
fact, the Israelis have given medical aid to fighters from Jabhat al Nusra
which is part of Al Qaeda which attacked the US on 9/11.”
By universal consent, Fisk is among the
most knowledgeable journalist who has lived in West Asia for decades. But the
Imperial Information order keeps him outside the ken.
Truth however has a way of surfacing.
Let us revert to Friedman’s interview with Obama. Friedman asked Obama why he
delayed taking action against the IS when it was in its nascent stages?
Obama replies: “That we did not just
start taking a bunch of airstrikes all across Iraq as soon as the IS came in
was because that would have taken the pressure off Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri
al Maliki.”
In other words, by the US President’s
own admission, the IS at that stage worked as an asset to apply pressure on
Maliki who was in bad adour with the US because he had refused to sign the
Status of Forces Agreement with the US ironically on the advice of exactly the
person Friedman was recommending for a Nobel Peace Prize in 2005 – Sistani.
Lo and behold, in his recent column,
Friedman is advising Trump to give up the pretense of fighting IS – because
that is not in the US (and presumably Israel’s) national interest.
He wants “Trump to be Trump – utterly
cynical and unpredictable. ISIS right now is the biggest threat to Iran,
Hezbollah, Russia and pro-Shiite Iranian militias.”
“In Syria” Friedman recommends, “Trump
should let ISIS be Assad’s, Iran’s Hezbollah’s and Russia’s headache.” In other
words, let the IS be a western asset.
A recent cartoon with a most succinct
message shows one Saudi ask another:
“We finance wars all around us, when
shall we bomb the Jewish state?”
“When it becomes Shia.”
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Touche! Your final comnent says it all!
ReplyDeleteTouche! Your final comnent says it all!
ReplyDeleteYour blog posts are great pleasure to read. Very insightful esp about Muslim States of Middle East. Pakistan and Muslims of India. Unfortunately Indian rulers have not paid attention to Shia Muslims of India.
ReplyDelete