[Vision2020] God Keeps His Kettle Boiling

Art Deco art.deco.studios at gmail.com
Sun Jun 2 07:24:19 PDT 2013


  [image: The New York Times] <http://www.nytimes.com/>

------------------------------
June 1, 2013
As Syrians Fight, Sectarian Strife Infects Mideast By TIM
ARANGO<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/a/tim_arango/index.html>,
ANNE BARNARD<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/anne_barnard/index.html>and
DURAID
ADNAN

BAGHDAD — Renewed sectarian killing has brought the highest death toll in
Iraq in five years. Young Iraqi scholars at a Shiite Muslim seminary
volunteer to fight Sunnis in Syria. Far to the west, in Lebanon, clashes
have worsened between opposing sects in the northern city of Tripoli.

In Syria itself, “Shiites have become a main target,” said Malek, an
opposition activist who did not want his last name published because of
safety concerns. He was visiting Lebanon from a rebel-held Syrian town,
Qusayr, where his brother died Tuesday battling Shiite guerrillas from the
Lebanese militia Hezbollah. “People lost brothers, sons, and they’re
angry,” he said.

The Syrian civil war is setting off a contagious sectarian conflict beyond
the country’s borders, reigniting long-simmering tensions between Sunnis
and Shiites, and, experts fear, shaking the foundations of countries
cobbled together after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

For months, the fighting in Syria has spilled across its borders as rockets
landed in neighboring countries or skirmishes crossed into their
territories. But now, the Syrian war, with more than 80,000 dead, is
inciting Sunnis and Shiites in other countries to attack one another.

“Nothing has helped make the Sunni-Shia narrative stick on a popular level
more than the images of Assad — with Iranian help — butchering Sunnis in
Syria,” said Trita
Parsi<http://www.niacouncil.org/site/PageServer?pagename=About_parsi>,
a regional analyst and president of the National Iranian American Council,
referring to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria. “Iran and Assad may win
the military battle, but only at the expense of cementing decades of ethnic
discord.”

The Syrian uprising began as peaceful protests against Mr. Assad and
transformed over two years into a bloody battle of attrition. But the
killing is no longer just about supporting or opposing the government, or
even about Syria. Some Shiites are pouring into Syria out of a sense of
religious duty. In Iraq, random attacks on Sunni mosques and neighborhoods
that had subsided in recent years have resumed — a wedding was
recently hit<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/30/world/middleeast/iraq-bombing-kills-members-of-wedding-party.html>—
as Sunni militias fight the army.

With Sunni-led Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey backing the uprising against
Mr. Assad, who is supported by Shiite Iran and Hezbollah, sectarian
divisions simmering since the American invasion of Iraq are spreading
through a region already upended by the Arab uprisings.

The Syrian war fuels, and is fueled by, broader antagonisms that are
primarily rooted not in sect but in clashing geopolitical and strategic
interests: the regional power struggle between Saudi Arabia and Iran;
Iran’s confrontation with the West over its nuclear program; and the
alliance between Hezbollah and the secular Syrian
government<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/26/world/middleeast/syrian-army-and-hezbollah-step-up-raids-on-rebels.html>of
Mr. Assad against American-backed Israel.

But sectarian feeling has seeped in. Iraq has been especially vulnerable.
With the Sunni majority in Syria battling to overthrow a government
dominated by Mr. Assad’s Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiism, some in
Iraq’s Sunni minority grew emboldened by the prospect of overthrowing their
own Shiite government.

Today, many Iraqis feel they are on the road back to the dark days of 2006
and ’07, the peak of sectarian militia massacres by Shiites ascendant after
years of oppression under Saddam Hussein, and by minority Sunnis
disempowered by his fall.

While the 2007 American troop surge helped to limit the bloodshed, random
attacks against Shiites never stopped. What was different was that the
Shiites, who finally felt firmly in control of the security forces, stopped
retaliating. But that seems to be changing.

Sunni militias have risen up to fight the army, and for the first time in
years Sunni mosques and neighborhoods are being regularly targeted. The
first notable attack was in April, at a cafe in the Sunni neighborhood of
Amariya; it started late at night as young men played pool, and it left
dozens of people dead. While it is unclear who is responsible for the new
violence, many Sunnis blame the government, or Iranian-backed Shiite
militias.

In Lebanon, perennial clashes between Alawite and Sunni militias in Tripoli
have reached their worst level in years as each side blames the other for
carnage in Syria.

In Syria, both the government and its opponents insist that their civil war
is not a fight between religious sects. Rebel leaders say their only aim is
to depose a dictator. Mr. Assad says he is fending off extremist
terrorists, and he is careful not to frame the conflict as a fight against
the country’s Sunni majority, which he praises for its moderation.

Mr. Assad’s affinity with Hezbollah and Iran is primarily strategic. Though
his Alawite sect, about 12 percent of the population, provides bedrock
support, most Alawites are secular. Syria’s fewer than 200,000 mainstream
Shiites are a much smaller minority, less than 1 percent.

Like Iraqis — who long insisted they were Iraqis first, and blamed
outsiders for the rise of sectarian identity, yet descended into
bloodletting — Syrians on both sides fear and disavow the slide into
sectarianism.

But in real terms, Shiite Hezbollah and the Sunni-dominated Al Nusra
Front<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/11/world/middleeast/us-designates-syrian-al-nusra-front-as-terrorist-group.html>,
a radical group allied with Al Qaeda, have emerged as two of the strongest
militias in the Syrian civil war.

Both sides have also been willing to tap into sectarian alliances and
emotions. With the West hesitant to fully support the opposition, rebels
accepted help from Al Qaeda in Iraq, a Sunni militant group, and the
reliable pipeline of weapons and cash flowing from extremist Sunni donors
to jihadists, whose calls for an Islamic state found support among some
Syrians influenced by hard-line clerics in Saudi Arabia.

On Friday, an influential Sunni Islamist cleric in Qatar, Sheik Yusef
al-Qaradawi, called on Sunnis around the world to go to Syria to fight
Hezbollah and Iran, calling them enemies of Islam.

Alawite militias in Syria have been accused of slaughtering Sunni families.
Sunni rebels and gangs have been accused of kidnapping Shiites. Sunni
fighters call Shiites “filth” and “dogs.” Rebel commanders have begun to
refer to Hezbollah, whose name means party of God, as the “party of the
devil.”

Government supporters call rebels “rats” and paint them with a broad brush
as Bedouins and Wahhabis — a puritanical strain of Sunni Islam from Saudi
Arabia. Fadil Mutar, an Iraqi Shiite, said at the funeral of his son, who
was killed in Syria, that he died fighting Wahhabis, “those vile people.”

Rafiq Lotof, a Syrian-American Shiite who left his pizza business in New
Jersey to help Syrian officials organize militias known as the National
Defense Forces, said recently in Damascus that Shiite religious passions
would help the government survive.

“If we start to lose control, you will see thousands of Iranians come to
Syria, thousands of Lebanese, from Iraq also,” Mr. Lotof said. “They are
going to fight, they are not going to watch. That’s part of their
religion.”

In Beirut, Lebanon, Kamel Wazne, the founder of the Center for American
Strategic Studies, said that fighters are inspired by religious passions
rooted in the seventh-century battle in what is now Iraq over who would
succeed the Prophet Muhammad.

After the bitter defeat of the faction that gave rise to the Shiites, the
victors captured the prophet’s granddaughter Zeinab and took her to
Damascus, where Shiites believe she is buried beneath the gold-domed shrine
of Sayida Zeinab.

Today, Shiite fighters help the Syrian government to hold the area around
Sayida Zeinab — a foothold that helps prevent rebels from fully encircling
Mr. Assad’s seat of power in Damascus.

“Damascus did not fall because Sayida Zeinab is there,” Mr. Wazne said.
“They will not allow Zeinab to be captured twice.”

Many devout Shiites have also come to view the Syrian civil war as the
fulfillment of a Shiite prophecy that presages the end of time: a
devil-like figure, Sufyani, raises an army in Syria and marches on Iraq to
kill Shiites. Abu Ali, a student in Najaf, Iraq, said that his colleagues
believe the leader of Qatar, a chief backer of Syria’s Sunni rebels, is
Sufyani. They are flocking to Syria “to protect Islam,” he said.

Days after pro-government militias killed scores of civilians last month in
the Sunni village of Bayda near the Syrian coast, one Sunni resident
declared in an interview: “Starting today, I am sectarian. I am sectarian!
I don’t want ‘peaceful’ anymore.” Composing himself, he added, “Sister,
forgive me for talking this way.”

Tim Arango and Duraid Adnan reported from Baghdad, and Anne Barnard from
Damascus, Syria, and Beirut, Lebanon. Reporting was contributed by
employees of The New York Times from Hilla, Iraq, and Najaf, Iraq, and by
Hania Mourtada and Hwaida Saad from Beirut.


-- 
Art Deco (Wayne A. Fox)
art.deco.studios at gmail.com
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