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Democracy in Iraq: Is the Glass Half Empty or is it Half Full?

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The Iraqi elections of May 2018 have been followed by a lengthy process of forming a new government, one which has yet to be completed.  Extensive wheeling and dealing took place and only within the last month have most of the new government ministers been appointed.  Legitimately so, many analyses of the elections criticized the dysfunction which characterized the election process as well as the time it took to put a new government in place.  Nevertheless, the question still remains: were there any positive outcomes of the elections and do they point to a step forward in a transition to meaningful democracy?

First, let’s recognize that the 2018 elections represented the fifth time Iraqis have gone to the polls and elected national leaders.  That these elections were largely fair and free and did not entail significant violence constitute positive developments. Second, that large numbers of Iraqi were allowed to present themselves as candidates for elections was likewise significant.  Third, while the elections in 2005 saw Iraqis vote according to religious sect or ethnicity, in 2010 a cross-ethnic coalition won a majority of seats.

That Iraq could participate in democratic elections  in a society in which, in 2002, it was a capital crime to criticize the country’s president or tell a joke about him, and pedestrians overheard saying negative things about the regime could have their tongues cut off and tied to telephone poles to bleed to death was a striking change.

If we add to this political mix, the negative impact of the US invasion of 2003 which, while removing Saddam and the Bath, implemented many policies which impeded efforts of Iraq to move towards democracy, we see that how we frame Iraq since 2003 is key to understanding and accessing whether or not it has made any progress towards democratization.

The US’ actions after toppling Saddam in May 2003 worked at cross purposes with the stated goal of bringing democracy to Iraq.  Rather than reaching out to potential leaders within Iraq, the Bush administration brought expatriates who had been exile, some for more than 3 decades, to run the country.  Either corrupt officials, such as Ahmad Chalabi, now  the leader of the defunct Iraqi National Congress, Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, the head of the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), which was created by the Iranian regime, and members of the Islamic Call (al-Dacwa al-Islamiya) Party such as Nuri al-Maliki.

The efforts of Coalition Provisional Authority Administrator, C. Paul Bremer, to act as gatekeeper who tried to determine which Iraqis could become candidates for public office was opposed by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. Fortunately, Bremer was forced to back down. But this was just one of many acts by the occupation authority which impeded rather than encouraged a transition to democracy.   

Two of the most egregious decisions was the failure to secure Baghdad and other Iraqi cities after the regime fell.  The looting which went on for days undermined the confidence of Iraqis in the ability of the US to control the country and, by extension, that the effort to establish democracy as a serious one, as opposed to a subterfuge designed to make Iraq an American satellite.

The other egregious decision was dissolving the Iraq conscript army.  Largely hostile to Saddam and the catalyst for the March 1991 Uprising (al-Intifada) when retreating troops from Kuwait fired tank shells at a mural of Saddam in the main square of Iraq’s port city of Basra, the conscript army was a battle tested force.  Once the insurgency began in the fall of 2003, the US lacked the experience and intelligence to suppress it.  The resulting chaos and deaths of thousands of Iraqis (and US troops) was a disaster which could have been avoided if the US had seriously engaged Iraqis rom many walks of life and listened to their needs and reacted appropriately.

Emerging from a legacy of 35 years of Bacthist rule, during which Iraq experienced two of the most devastating wars of the 20thcentury – the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War and the 1991 Gulf War, followed by the March 1991 Intifada – devastated Iraq’s infrastructure and small industrial base, including its oil economy.  The UN sanctions regime imposed on Iraq in 1991, and only removed after the US invasion in 2003, crippled Iraq’s middle class and set its educational system – before 1980 one of the best in the Middle East – back decades.

If we add this legacy to the US invasion and occupation which, while removing Saddam Husayn, created more impediments to Iraq by empowering :sectarian entrepreneurs whose main goal was augmenting their power and wealth, it is indeed remarkable that Iraq has been able to prioress as far as it has towards institutionalizing a democratic political system since 2003.

The political culture that preceded the Bacth Party ‘s seizure of power, first in February 1963, and then in July 1968, was one of ethnic and religious accommodation.  For sure, sectarian incidents, such as the Farhud of June 1941, existed, as did the massacre by the Iraqi army of Assyrian military forces in the summer of 1933, but these events were the exception, not the rule in Iraq.  There weren’t, for example, the type of systematic pogroms against Jews which Cossack brigades carried out in Czarist Russia.

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Iraqis realized the devastation caused by sectarianism when the Dacish seized Mosul in June 2014. After the Iraqi army abandoned its posts, and many Shica soldiers were killed by the terrorists, it became clear that the disaster was the result of Nuri al-Maliki sectarian and nepotistic  policies, e.g., appointing loyalist with little or no military experiences as officers who then used their positions to engage in steal from soldier salaries, promoting a toxic political environment in Mosul.

Despite al-Maliki efforts to use the Iraqi military in the form of calling tanks to patrol the streets of Baghdad, he was nevertheless removed from office.  This was not done though assassinating or even imprisoning him, as would be the case in many other MENA region countries.  Indeed, he was allowed to remain as a Vice President. While al-Maliki was able to continue to wield power, and has sought to promote negative policies since 2014, the key point is that he was not killed when another politician filled his position as prime minister.

His replacement, Haydar al-Abadi, was a well-respected politician with an engineering degree from Manchester University who lived for many years in the UK. Despite a member of al-Maliki Islamic Call Party, al-Abadi’s rule was devoid of sectarianism and he himself set a good model for decorum.  No one has accused him of pursuing corrupt and nepotistic policies while in office, in contradistinction to al-Maliki.


The elections of May 2018 demonstrated that the policy of politicians relying on sectarianism to mobilize support among voters has run its course.  This is not to argue that sectarian entrepreneurs and sectarian identities still play a powerful role in Iraq’s political system.  However, Iraqi voters favored the Sairun (We are Coming) Coalition which linked the Sadrists and the Iraqi Communist Party.  The main platform of this coalition was improving social services for the populace and eliminating corruption which was the cause of poor services.

Still the “quota” (al-muhassasa) system still functions as the main criterion for appointment to high government office.  Much like the confessional system in Lebanon, the informal rule is that the presidency of the federal republic belongs to a Kurd, the prime ministership to a Shica Arab, and the speakership of the parliament to a Sunni Arab.  Cabinet ministers are also appointed according to the power of the various political coalitions (and they are fluid coalitions, not established political parties as that term is generally understood).

Muqtada al-Sadr, for example, leader of the Sairun Coalition. has blocked candidates for the Interior, Higher Education and Scientific Research, the ministry of culture, and, most recently,  a ministry destined for the Sunni al-Bina' Alliance which is part of the al-Fatah PMU (al-hashad al-shacbi) coalition.  While this behavior is indicative of the power struggle between al-Sadr and Hadi al Amiri, the al-Fatah and PMU leader, it points to the extent to which an informal system of “checks and balances” operate to prevent political power from being consolidated in the hands of a single political leader and hence impedes the rise of another dictator such as Saddam.



The Great Betrayal: 10 Negative Consequences of Trump’s Withdrawal for US Troops from Syria

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The decision by the Trump administration to withdraw US troops from Syria represents a  foreign-policy decision which will have a negative impact not only on the MENA region but far beyond.  At first glance, one might be asked why withdrawing 2,200 American troops from Syria should be framed in such a negative light?  However, this decision reflects much more than a simple drawdown of troops in Syria. What will be the ramifications of Trump’s decision?

Let me begin by listing the 10 negative consequences of Trump’s decision and then examine that damage in greater detail. 
1)    Trump’s withdrawal of US troops strengthens the so-called Islamic State, materially and psychologically
2)    In the process, Trump has abandoned the Kurds of northeast Syria (Rojava), who have played a central role in helping the US defeat the Dacish terrorists, and exposed them to a brutal attack by the Turkish. army and its allied militias comprised of radical Islamists  
3)    The US withdrawal will create a military and political vacuum in Northeast Syria which will be filled by three authoritarian states which will gain power in the MENA region: Turkey, Iran and Russia
4)    Failure to maintain support of the Kurds of Rojava will strengthen the genocidal regime of Syrian dictator, Bashar al-Asad, and make it easier to once again impose despotic rule on the Kurds, including through use of chemical weapons
5)    Trump’s decision threatens to destroy one of the most democratic experiments in the MENA, a region known for authoritarian rule, namely that pf the Rojava Kurds
6)    An attack on the Kurds will produce more chaos and refugees, who will place greater burdens on the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq and on refugee assistance organizations in the area
7)    Trump has undermined US foreign policy in the MENA region by sending a clear message that the US cannot be trusted to keep its words to its allies, especially those who do not possess large supplies of oil.
8)    The US withdrawal puts more pressure on an already overextended Iraqi army which will need to fill the military vacuum against the Dacish along the Syria-Iraq border
9)    Trump’s decision underlines the efforts of his administration to continue the US withdrawal not only from the MENA region but from global affair
10) Trump’s decision has undermined the morale of the US military, leading to the resignations of 2 top players in Syria, Defense Secretary, General James Mattis, and Special Iraq Envoy, Brett McGurk


Contrary to Trump’s assertions, the Dacish has not been defeated in eastern Syria. While the terrorists only control a small area around the town of Hatrin in eastern Syria (about the size of Manhattan island in New York), estimates place the number of Dacish fighters at as high as 30,000.

In neighboring Iraq, in the mountainous areas and caves near the city of Kirkuk in northeastern Iraq, the Iraqi army and Federal Police are constantly engaged in firefights with terrorist from Dacish “sleeper cells.”

The withdrawal f US troops will not only further encourage terrorist attacks, both against the Rojava Kurds and Iraqi security services, i.e., in both eastern Syria and northeastern Iraq, but will be posited by the so-called Islamic State a s a “victory” against “Crusader forces.”  Thus the withdrawal will constitute a “shot in th arm” which will help reinvigorate the Dacish, helping it to reorganize and attract new fighters.

If the morale of the Dacish terrorists is strengthened by the withdrawal of US forces in northeastern Syria, the opposite is the case for the Rojava Kurds. The YPG,YPJ and Syrian Democratic Forces all responded with shock (as did many US troops stationed in the Rojava region) to Trump’s announcement.

That Trump’s announcement was issued soon after a telephone call he had with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan wasn’t lost on the Kurds and their local allies.  The citizens Democratic Federation of Northern Syria know that Erdogan has been itching to attack the Kurds who he claims support the PKK (the Kurdish Workers Party) which has been fighting the Ankara government for the past 30 years to obtain more rights for Turkey’s minority Kurdish population.

Erdoğan considers the PKK a terrorist organization (and I indicated that its attacks on local police forces and the Turkish army is an unacceptable way to secure more its for Turkey’s Kurds. However, it s completely false to argue that the Rojava Kurds are involved in PKK attacks inside Turkey.  What is much closer to the truth is that Erdogan fears the success of the Rojava Kurds not only in their ability to break away from the tyrannical regime of Bashar al-Asad but in creating a model society (see below) which could be emulated by Turkey’s Kurds





Conversions of Cultural Hegemony in Iraq: The Decline of Islamism and Emergence of National Identity

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Dr. Faris Kamal Nadhmi
Guest Contributor, Dr. Faris Kamal Nadhmi, founding President of the Iraqi Association of Political Psychology, and author of numerous books and articles, is one of the most astute analysts of the dynamics of contemporary politics and politicized religion in Iraq.  The New Middle East is pleased to publish an abstract his latest contribution to our understanding of contemporary politics: 
Conversions of Cultural Hegemony in Iraq:
The Decline of Islamism and Emergence of National Identity
https://www.strikingmargins.com/

In May 2018, Iraq held national parliamentary elections.  What was significant about these elections  was the relative shift in electoral consciousness and support away from sectarian political parties which have controlled Iraqi politics since 2003.  Prior to the elctions, for more than two years, several Iraqi cities, in central and southern Iraq, have witnessed continuous protests against the cultural hegemony of sectarian political parties which call for comprehensive political reform.  Demonstrators continue to fight corruption and economic deprivation with the goal of establishing a civil state and building a cross-ethic and cross-sect national identity.

This paper assumes that, once those who control political power begin to lose their ability to convince sub-altern groups to internalize the dominant hegemonic political cultural discourse, social and political change will be largely dependent on the emergence of an alternative cultural hegemonic vision among negatively affected sub-altern groups. This dialectical conflict in Iraq pits a cultural hegemony, which is on the decline (Islamization or political Islam), against its opposite (secular Nationalism) which is gaining strength in Iraqi politics.

The latter, counter-hegemonic vision, which was initially organized by educated civil elites, who have fought to promote horizontal modes of political consciousness and voting behavior, has progressively succeeded in attracting increasing numbers of protesters from religious groups, who are economically deprived, socially excluded and lack access to education. This coalition, which ended up forming an electoral political alliance between the Sadrists (followers of Mugtada al-Sadr), the Iaqi Communist Party, and other civic groups, has achieved an important and dominant role as a result of last May's electoral results, based its political agenda with a slogan «building the Civil state, the State of citizenship and social justice».

This paper explains the drivers which have led to the decline in Islamist hegemony versus the emergence of this alternative nationalist counter-hegemony.  It highlights the growing effectiveness of citizens in public space, the evolution of their political culture, and the growing challenge they face in making those who control power practice accountable governance, and the emerging dynamics in the changes in political cultural hegemony currently king place in Iraqi society.

تحولات الهيمنة الثقافية في العراق:
بين أفول الأسلمة وبزوغ الوطنياتية

فارس كمال نظمي
رئيس االجمعية العراقية لعلم النفس السياسي

شهد العراق مؤخراً إجراء انتخابات برلمانية تميزت بحدوث انزياح نسبي في الوعي الانتخابي باتجاه خيارات عابرة للطائفية السياسية السائدة منذ 2003. وقبل ذلك، وعلى مدى أكثر من سنتين، شهدت بعض المدن العراقية في الوسط والجنوب، حركة احتجاجات مستمرة ضد الهيمنة الثقافية - بتعبير غرامشي- للإثنيات السياسية، مطالبة بإصلاح سياسي شامل لمكافحة الفساد والحرمان وتأسيس دولة مدنية تعمل على بناء هوية وطنية جامعة. تفترض هذه الورقة أن السلطة السياسية ما أن تبدأ بفقدان قدرتها على الترويج لمشروعها الثقافي في أذهان الناس، حتى يصبح التغيير الاجتماعي والسياسي مرهوناً إلى حد كبير ببزوغ هيمنة ثقافية بديلة لدى الفئات الاجتماعية المتضررة. وما يميز هذا التقابل الجدلي في العراق بين هيمنة ثقافية تنحسر (الأسلمة) وأخرى معاكسة تبزغ (الوطنياتية)، أن هذه الأخيرة جرى تحفيزها على يد النخب المدنية المثقفة في باديء الأمر، بوصفهم "حركة اجتماعية"مطلبية أفقية نجحت فيما بعد، باجتذاب أعداد متزايدة من المحتجين الدينيين ممن يصنفون في إطار الفئات المحرومة اقتصادياً والمستبعدة اجتماعياً والفقيرة تعليمياً؛ لينتهي الأمر إلى إعلان تحالف سياسي انتخابي بين الصدريين والشيوعيين وجماعات مدنية أخرى، حقق تفوقاً (هيمنة) ذا أهمية في نتائجه الانتخابية مستنداً في برنامجه السياسي إلى شعار "لبناء الدولة المدنية، دولة المواطنة والعدالة الاجتماعية". وهنا ستسعى هذه الورقة لإظهار ملامح الأفول في الهيمنة الإسلاموية في مقابل ملامح البزوغ لهذه الهيمنة الوطنياتية المضادة، بتسليط الضوء على تنامي فاعلية الفرد في الفضاء العمومي وتطور ثقافته السياسية وتنامي نزعة التحدي والمساءلة لديه حيال السلطة، على نحوٍ يوضح الديناميات المستجدة في تحولات الهيمنة الثقافية داخل المجتمع العراقي.

Roger Owen - A Remembrance of a Life Well Lived

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This afternoon I attended a memorial ceremony for Roger Owen, the A.J. Meyer Professor of Middle Eastern History emeritus at Harvard University, who passed away on December 22, 2018.  As many know, Roger made considerable contributions to the field of Middle Eastern and post-colonial studies.  His books on the economic history of the MENA region, and the origins and functioning of the authoritarian state, which he framed using a political economy approach, not only challenged many Orientalist tenets, but led many young scholars to develop new conceptual frameworks for studying the region. 

Both at the ceremony and reception which followed at the  Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies which he directed for many years, many colleagues, former students and family members spoke eloquently about Roger’s legacy.  It was clear from the numerous accolades that Roger touched the many lives in his 83 years.
As for myself, I was fortunate to receive funding for doctoral dissertation research many years ago from St. Antony’s College, Oxford, where Roger directed the Middle East Centre, before joining Harvard in 1993.  Coming to Oxford from Egypt, where I had been studying Egyptian efforts through the Bank Misr and the Misr Group of companies, in the 1920s and 1930s, to challenge British domination of the economy, turned out to be much more than an opportunity to study sources relevant to my research at the Public Records Office (the National Archives) in London.

Once at St. Antony’s, I soon learned that Roger was the main force behind the establishment of a study group on the Middle East which included many eminent scholars of the region. The study group was not designed to gather more “facts” but rather to restructure the manner in which the Middle East was viewed in academic circles and the normative dimensions of choosing one conceptual approach over another.

In addition to Roger, at Oxford I had the chance to meet Aziz Azmah, Michael Gilsenan, Caglar Kaydar, Philip Khoury, Samir Radwan, Barbara Smith and many other theorists whose work would profoundly affect my own. Having been exposed to the modernization theory of the 1960s and 1970s, I now found that my sessions with my Oxford colleagues allowed me to develop a new approach and situate my research in a political economy perspective.

This new perspective, facilitated by Roger’s efforts to develop a progressive intellectual community at Oxford, revolutionized my thinking. Despite being characterized as “Marxist” by the late Charles Issawi, who served as a reader of my manuscript, my dissertation was subsequently published by Princeton University Press.

The Oxford study group was, in turn, linked to a larger group which Talal Asad, then at Hull University, and Roger established.  This larger group, which came to be known as the Hull Middle East Studies Seminar, organized a number of conferences at Hull University during the late 1970 and 1980s, which attracted scholars not only from the UK but from continental Europe and the US as well.  The result of these conferences was the well-known Review of Middle East Studies series.

The activities of the Hull Middle East Studies Seminar, a group which attacked Orientalism before Edward Said’s famous book of the same title made the term famous, inspired young academics in the US to establish the Alternative Middle East Studies Seminar (with the awkward acronym AMESS) in the mid and late 1970s which founded chapters on ten major campuses with Middle East studies programs throughout the US. 

Despite dissolving during the 1980s, these US study groups, modeled on what Talal Asad and Roger had created in the UK have had a lasting impact in breaking from the traditional area studies and ideational model which had heretofore dominated studies of the region.

More recently, Roger, and  his close friend and colleague, Muhamed Almaliky of Harvard’s Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, organized two excellent symposia on Iraq in March 2017 and March 2018.  These symposia brought together older and younger researchers, producing a rich intellectual synthesis between more established approaches to the study of Iraq with innovative concepts and methodologies of a new generation of analysts.  At the evening dinner last March, which capped such an inspirational day, Roger regaled us all with a lovely, gentle French song before we departed.

Roger never took himself too seriously.  He treated everyone he met with dignity and respect which were duly returned.  He loved sports and was an accomplished Rugby player at Oxford with a large photograph of his team affixed to a wall in his house.  At first glance, Roger could  come across as serious.  But it was never long before a joke and an impish smile, which all his friends knew so well, came across his face.    

Roger was a man of the left but he never let a rigid ideology distort his scholarship. Given his personal values and demeanor, and his scholarship, h leaves a model to be emulated by us all.



Augustus Richard Norton - Celebrating a Life

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Augustus Richard (Dick) Norton passed away after a long illness on February 20, 2019.  At the time of his passing, Dick was Professor of Anthropology and International Relations emeritusin the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies, and Director of the Institute for Iraqi Studies, Boston University; and Fellow, in the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, Oxford University.  He was also co-editor, with Dale Eickelman, of the well-know series, Princeton Studies on Muslim Politics. 

As is well known, Dick was a pillar of Middle East studies and US foreign policy analysis in the MENA region.  Over the span of many decades, Dick published numerous books and articles which helped expand and deepen our understanding of Middle East politics.  His military background enabled him to formulate foreign policy positions which were well informed and often critical of US policy in the MENA region.

Dick and I both received our Ph.D. degrees in political science from the University of Chicago where we studied with the late Leonard Binder.  However, Dick was also trained in anthropology. This unique combination of political science and anthropology enabled Dick to conduct research that was often “outside the (analytic) box.”   

I first met Dick in the early 1980s.  The School of Education at the University of Michigan had received a grant from the Exxon Education Foundation to have a number of American universities, including Rutgers. engage in simulations of the Arab-Israeli conflict.  Dick arrived at Rutgers to head the simulation's "Operations Center."  In this role, he was charged with reviewing any diplomatic or military effort proposed by one of the student teams - representing the many parties to the conflict - and deciding whether the proposed action was realistic in nature.  Seeing Dick in action, I knew right away that this was someone who took Middle East politics seriously.

Having served in Vietnam, Dick joined the United Nations Truce  Supervision Force in Lebanon (UNTSO) in Lebanon in 1981. This position enabled Dick to gain an in-depth understanding of the difficult lives and suffering experienced by the population of South Lebanon, particularly the Shica who have been consistently neglected but the central government in Beirut and were also caught between Israel and the PLO, which used southern Lebanon as a base of operations against Israel. 
While maintaining a critical analytic perspective, Dick developed a deep empathy for the Shica who were caught between economic and social neglect and the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon after the 1982 invasion.  At the time of his research and publication, Shica politics had not yet captured the attention of political scientists working on Middle East politics.  Here Dick’s work was clearly cutting edge.

Dick’s first work on the Shica of Lebanon examined the Amal movement which had been formed to address government neglect of the south.  This book, Amal and the Shica: Struggle for the Soul of Lebanon, published by the University of Texas Press in 1987. Arabic edition, Beirut: Dar Bilal, 1988,
was later followed by, Hezballah: A Short Introduction, published in 2007, and in multiple updated editions, by Princeton University Press. This prescient study has become a classic for the study of Hizballah, whose importance in Lebanese and Levantine politics has only increased over time, especially due to its role in the ongoing Syrian civil war and ties to Iran.
Following his UNTSO service in Lebanon. Dick taught at West Point from 1981 to 1993, offering the military academy’s only anthropology course.  As he told me, Dick encountered difficulty in his ability to comment on US policy in the MENA region – a policy with which he increasingly disagreed - teaching at West Point. Thus, he left Academy to join the faculty at Boston University, having resigned from the US military with the rank of colonel.  At BU, he taught courses on Middle East politics, anthropology and international relations.
Before the concept became popular, Dick convened an important conference on the role of civil society in Middle East politics in the early 1990s, with a 3 year grant from the Ford Foundation.  The two-volume study he edited, Civil Society in the Middle East, EJ Brill, 1995, which emerged from the conference, continues to be cited in numerous studies since it was first published in 1995.

Dick Norton’s publications were by no means limited to his many books.  The list of articles, book chapters and occasional papers in his CV runs to several pages.  One of my favorite pieces, which I use in courses on Middle East politics, is his “Thwarted Politics: The Case of Egypt’s Hizb al-Wasat,” which appeared in, Remaking Muslim Politics: Pluralism, Contestation, and Democratization, which was edited by Robert Hefner, and published by Princeton University Press, in 2005. 

This ethnography, which entailed year-long interviews of party officials, presents a study a serious effort to establish a truly democratic Islamist party in Egypt, one which opened its doors to Egypt’s Coptic Christian community.  Even though it was thwarted by the Mubarak regime, the model offered by the Hizb al-Wasat provides a vision of what could be when Islam and democracy establish a tolerant synergistic relationship.

In 2006, Dick was invited to join the Iraq Study Group, chaired by former Secretary of State, James Baker and former Representative and Wilson Center director, Lee Hamilton.  Needless to say, Dick was highly disappointed, but not surprised, that the Study Group’s suggestions for policy changes in Iraq were ignored by the Bush administration.

After the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, Dick was able to obtain funding and establish the Institute for Iraqi Studies at Boston University.  I had the privilege of attending a number of the conferences sponsored by the Institute, including one which took place in the midst of Boston’s lockdown following the Boston Marathon bombings. These conferences brought many scholars from Iraq, Europe and the US to BU.  Dick asked me to wrote a precis of my book-length study, Taking Democracy Seriously in Iraq, which was published by the Institute.

Dick was co-founder and chair of the Conference Group on the Middle East which convened panels at the American Political Science Association meetings each year. The Conference Group was indicative of Dick’s efforts to promote younger scholars of Middle East politics through offering them the opportunity to showcase innovative research.

Following the publication of  Memories of State: Politics, History and Collective Identity in Modern Iraq, Dick invited me to lecture on my study at his senior undergraduate seminar at BU.  Both during the class and reception that followed, the extent to which his students respected him and held him in high esteem was abundantly clear.  Unlike some academics, who treat their students in an imperial manner, Dick offered an admirable role model – one which taught students not to fear their instructor, while encouraging them to be creative and think on their own.

Dick Norton was a mensch in the best sense of that word.  He treated everyone as an equal.  Rather than spending time criticizing the works of others, he focused on original research and new ways of thinking about US foreign policy in the MENA region.  Indeed, in the many years I knew him, I never recall him uttering a gratuitous insult of a colleague in the field political science or Middle East studies.
Dick Norton at his retirement ceremony at Boston University in 2017
Through the high quality of his research and writing (devoid of social science jargon), the excellent instructional and mentoring skills he exhibited, and the decency he demonstrated in his inter-personal relations, Dick Norton achieved exemplary success in his life and professional career.  Would that we all could emulate his example.

Not a Room, but a Public Sphere of Her Own: The Political Marginalization of Iraqi Women - a Review of Women and Gender in Iraq: Between Nation-Building and Fragmentation

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Dr. Zahra Ali
Iraq has faced many challenges since Saddam Husayn’s authoritarian regime was toppled in 2003.  One challenge which has yet to be confronted is the role of Iraqi women in post Bacthist Iraq.  Because women obviously constitute a large percentage of the population, their inability to occupy positions of decision-making and power throughout the country undermines Iraq’s ability to develop a truly equitable society.  Their marginalization also threatens the country’s ability to achieve its full economic and social potential as a society. Why then are women marginalized in Iraq and what are the causes of their exclusion from the public sphere?

To find answers to these questions, we can turn to an excellent new study by Zahra Ali, Women and Gender in Iraq:  Between Nation-Building and Fragmentation, published by Cambridge University Press (2018).  Zahra Ali’s study is the most comprehensive study of women in Iraq to date and is the result of extensive ethnographic research.  Ali’s research took her to all areas of Iraq from the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) in the north, to the urban quarters of Baghdad and to the cities of southern Iraq. 

In the course of her research, which began in the Iraqi populated districts of Damascus in 2009, was followed by 2 years of intensive research in Baghdad from 2010-2012, and then involved shorter research trips to Iraq in 2013, 2016 and 2017, Ali interviewed hundreds of women activists in Iraq.  These women represent all sectors of Iraqi society, representing different generations, ideological perspectives and the country’s diverse ethnic and religious groups.  


Dr. Husnaa Azhar Qadir - Sa'irun List
2018 parliamentary elections 
Often facing dangerous conditions, Ali nevertheless was successful in documenting  the numerous initiatives enacted by Iraqi women in a wide variety of  organizations established since 2003 and the problems they face in a male-dominated political system which has refused to offer them a place at the post-Bacthist political table.  According to Iraq's Constitution, the Chamber of Deputies is required to have 25% of its seat filled by women.  As yet, the ability of women parliamentarians to influence public policy has been minimal.https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2018/05/08/female-candidates-are-facing-a-backlash-in-iraq

What we encounter in this study is a rich tableau of Iraqi women who can’t be reduced as a demographic to a set of stereotypical categories.  According deep respect to her subjects, Ali allows Iraqi women to speak for themselves. We are invited to share the personal narratives of the many activists she interviewed to grasp the predicament women face in contemporary Iraqi society. Ali’s subjects offer lengthy narratives in their own words, pointing to the meticulous notes the author kept throughout her research.  Clearly this book is a labor of love, filled with empathy for its subjects, but always characterized by analytic integrity.

Zahra Ali's study is characterized by great honesty.  This is particularly apparent in her research in the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG), the 3 semi-autonomous Kurdish-majority provinces in the northeast of Iraq.  In the KRG, Ali encounters great suspicion and even hostility, reflecting the anger many Kurds still feel for the abuses they suffered under Saddam Husayn's rule, including chemical weapons attacks by the Iraqi air force on the town of Halabja in March 1988.

Rather than relegate her personal experiences to a footnote, Ali offers extensive details about the difficulties she encountered during her research in the KRG, which demonstrate the deep divide between Arabs and Kurds in Iraq.  Nevertheless, Ali pressed on with her research, ultimately being able to conduct her interviews when the Kurds she met realized that she is from an "opposition family," which suffered under Saddam as they did.  What is refreshing is Ali's insistence on including women from all sectors of Iraqi society, including the Kurds.  All too often, studies of Iraqi politics and society are limited to Arab society and don't include Iraq's Kurdish citizens.
Kurdish policewomen vote in national elections
Although Women and Gender in Iraq isn't a narrative of victimization, it nevertheless underscores the enormous impediments Iraqi women face in trying to achieve their political, economic, social and cultural rights.  Ali’s study is both inspirational, as is clear from the wide range of normative goals, political and social activities and organizational efforts in which Iraqi women are involved, but highly disturbing as the challenges they confront continue to add up as we turn each page.

Ali notes that, “The current Iraqi context is characterized by conflicting gendered national imaginaries in which social, political and religious conservatism are articulated in complex ways.” (290).  While the term fragmentation aptly characterizes post-2003 Iraqi society, this is not true of what Ali refers to as “Islamist patriarchy.” 
Female members of the Iranian backed militia- Asa'ib Ahl al-Haqq

Almost all the women interviewed in Ali's study pursue their goals of greater equality by navigating the many constraints on their behavior, ranging from how they need to dress in public to maintain their “moral virtue” in society's eyes, to the shame and disparagement they endure if they aren’t married with a family, and the suspicion and even hostility they engender if they become accomplished, independent professionals.  Indeed, as Ali shows elsewhere, Iraqi women have even been assassinated for demonstrating their independence.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2018/10/15/after-several-high-profile-murders-in-iraq-heres-what-headlines-missed-about-their-cause/?utm_term=.1953a54873ed

Although not mentioned, Antonio Gramsci’s theory of hegemony jumps off the page throughout the book.  Islamist patriarchy is especially pernicious because women suffer if they deviate from what is deemed “natural” thought and behavior and their “proper place” in society.  Thus, men need to do very little to control women’s activities in the public sphere (or in the private sphere as well).  The extent to which those women Ali has interviewed feel the need to justify their efforts to promote the status of women in Iraqi society is a powerful testament of the ubiquitous dominance and repressive nature of patriarchy.

Years ago, I remember an Iraqi female activist telling me that, “Iraqi male politicians can hardly agree on anything, but what they all agree upon is repressing women.” She went on to describe how women’s rights have become a political issue since 2003.  One manner of gaining votes in elections, she argued, is to assure male voters, particularly those who are less educated, that their control over the women in their lives will not be diminished.

If the majority of male politicians – whether members of political elites or sub-elites – are united in their unwillingness to support gender equality in Iraq, Iraqi women’s groups are divided by ideology, sect and ethnicity.  Ali does an excellent job of detailing these differences without being judgmental.  While all women’s groups have the goal of greater equality, their vision of what exactly that equality would look like and how to reach it vary dramatically.

Secular women in the Iraqi Women’s Network and al-Rabita (closely aligned historically with the Iraqi Communist Party) chafe at having to dress to appease males and conservative religious clerics.   However, it is clear from rallies which Ali attends that secularists attract far fewer women supporters than do those organized along lines of what she calls Islamist feminists.  In the latter instance, Islamist women activists often benefit from the support of Islamist political parties, such as the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council.

Adding to the problems Iraqi women have faced since 2003 is the rise of the Popular Mobilization Units or PMUs (al-hashad al-shacbi) since the Islamic State’s seizure of Mosul and much of north central Iraq in June 2014.  As Ali notes, “There is total impunity for the armed groups who have committed crimes such as the killing or kidnapping of activists or journalists who criticized the military campaign in Mosul or offered any other critique of the army or al-Hashd al-Sha’bi."  The militarization of Iraqi society has strengthened patriarchal control.
Yazidi Sinjar Resistance Forces fighter

In this context, it would have been helpful to have a more detailed account of the role former Prime Minster Nuri al-Maliki played in the events which allowed a small, lightly armed force of Da’ish terrorists to seize Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, in June 2014, with little or no resistance by what was, on paper, a force of 30,000 Iraqi troops.  If it hadn’t been for Maliki’s oppressive sectarian policies in Mosul, the Da’ish never would have received the cooperation of large sectors of the city’s residents which allowed it to quickly defeat the Iraqi army and then begin its march south towards Baghdad. 

It was only at this point, when Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani issued a call for Iraqis to defend the nation, that the PMUs were created.  Subsequently, 3 of the largest Hashad units fell under Iranian influence and control and became strong enough to challenge the Iraqi army and federal police as the most powerful armed forces in the country.  

If Maliki had tried to promote reconciliation between the Arab Sunnis in the west and north central Iraq, rather than subjecting them to harsh sectarian treatment, the Dai’sh wouldn't have found fertile soil for support in Mosul.  The Popular Mobilization Units, whose rise to power and influence, would never have been formed and thus not made the struggle for gender equality all the more difficult. Lest we forget, it was President George W. Bush who appointed Maliki prime minister, over the objections of his advisors, in 2006, and President Barack Obama who allowed Maliki to remain in office in 2010, even though his State of Law Coalition lost national parliamentary elections to al-cIraqiya, led by Ayad Allawi.

Despite the fact that Ali argues, “The fragmentation of Iraq along communal lines  - Kurds in the north, Sunnis in the West and Shi’as in the south – appears irreversible (141), elsewhere she describes the cross-ethnic and cross-social class movement which forced the resignation of the Iraqi government in March 2016 (188).  Here we see a “massive popular movement – supported by the prominent religious figure Ayatollah Sistani – vilifying Iraq’s post invasion regime and demanding radical reforms.”  

The chants of the protestors: In the name of religion, we have been robbed by looters” (bi-ism il-din baguna al-haramiya), and “Bread, Freedom, a Civil State” (khubz, hurriya, dawla madiniya), point to a political consciousness which knows no gender, ideological or ethno-confessional boundaries.  Indeed, the support of the police and the Baghdad military forces in allowing the demonstrators to penetrate the Green Zone in March 2016 made clear the disgust among the populace at large at the way in which Iraq has been governed by the current political elite.

While beyond the scope of this study, Ali's research calls out for policies to address the unacceptable conditions women face in Iraqi society.  Education and social media platforms are critical for creating a different environment among youth, both male and female, who constitute 70% of Iraq's population under the age of 30.  Young males need to be taught that there is no "honor" in honor crimes when male members murder female members of their family because they have purportedly brought shame upon it.  Murder is a heinous crime and must be punished accordingly.

Women, like youth, have largely relied on NGOs to promote their respective agendas. Politcal parties are seen as corrupt and unwilling to assist women gain their rights, or assist youth in finding employment and becoming established in society.  Thus, the general feeling of both demographics is that political parties should be avoided.

However, there was a period when women were beginning to make progress in Iraq society.  This process began after WWII when women began to become active in political and social affairs, especially under the auspices of the Iraqi Communist Party.  This trend accelerated in the early years of cAbd al-Karim Qasim who came to power after a military coup overthrew the Hashimite monarchy in 1958.


Iraqi women protest efforts to rescind Iraq's 1959 Personal Status Law
In 1959, Iraq passed one of the most progressive Personal Status Laws in the Arab world in terms of women's rights.  The same year, Dr. Naziha al-Dulaymi was appointed the first Arab woman to receive a cabinet level appointment.  Women began to enter the university system in greater numbers, due  to Qasim's expansion of the higher education system.

Despite the fact that women began to make progress during the 1950s and early 1969s, the ICP and the Qasim regime remained under male control. For example, Naziha al-Dulaymi wrote in an article published in al-Thaqafa al-Jadida (New Culture) in the 1990s indicating that Qasim allowed her little decision-making as Minister of Municipalities.
The late Lamia Gailani Werr, an archaeologist specializing in
cuneiform seals, who helped the Iraq Museum recover from looting
Nevertheless, this period's model is one which should be pursued at present.  Creating a new political party which conjoins women activists, with the support of sympathetic men, and large numbers of educated youth, seems the only route to challenge the hegemony of patriarchal control in Iraq.  Civil society organizations, in the form of NGOs, and women's organizations which are tied to existing political parties which view them as appendages whose role is to assist in gaining more power, won't produce any fundamental change.

Having worked with Iraqi youth  from different parts of the country and from many ethnic and religious groups, I was struck by the degree to which young women and men, especially those in an educated setting who were members of NGOs, demonstrated a respect and empathy for one another.  Because youth comprise 70% of Iraq's populace under the age of 30, they constitute is a large demographic whose influence could be more effectively brought to bear during national and local elections.
Figen Yüksekdağ Şenoğlu
former HDP Co-Chair
Figen Yüksekdağ Şenoğlu and Selahattin Demirtaş, former co-chairs of the People's Democratic Party (HDP), offer a prototype of new political party in Iraq. The HDP was a unique political initiative in Turkey, bringing together a female and a male co-chair who bridged the ethnic divide between Turks and Kurds.  Even though Recep Tayyip Erdoğan imprisoned Selahattin Demirtaş on trumped up treason changes, the party can still inspire similar party models throughout the MENA region 

If in Iraq, a party organized on cross-gender lines could be formed, in which power was meaningful shared between women and men , namely men who would treat women as equals and could be trusted to promote gender equality, that could lay the foundation for significant political change.  



Selahattin Demirtaş
former HDP Co-Chair
If the new Iraqi party could rely upon enthusiastic support from youth who believed in the its mission, one which emphasized gender equality together with social justice, this could be the beginning of an organized effort to confront the troubling problem of patriarchal control of Iraqi politics and society. 

An Iraqi Democratic Party committed to gender equality, social justice, ethnic and religious tolerance, and devoted to fighting corruption and nepotism, would engender strong resistance.  However, it would elicit equally string support from th Iraqi populace which is disgusted with the form of governance which has characterized Iraq since the ousting of Saddam and the Ba th.  Perhaps most important of all, it could offer new hope and counter the increasing decline of trust in democracy.  Without a truly democratic polity, Iraqi women will not be able to achieve their rights








Youth and Building a New Iraq: The Iraq Public Leadership Program

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2019 Iraq Public Leadership Program directed by Dr. Yass al-Khafaji 
In its seventh year, the Iraq Pubic Leadership Program (IPLP) trains young Iraqi middle-career managers, NGO, and think tank members over a period of 10 months in principles of social entrepreneurship, impact investing, rule of law, and conflict resolution strategies.  I was privileged to have been invited to participate in this year’s  IPLP which included 30 remarkable Iraqi youth leaders. 

In what ways does the IPLP help improve economic and social conditions in Iraq?  Specifically, what hope does it offer Iraqi youth, many of whom are unemployed and have little hope in the future?

With 70% of Iraq’s population under the age of 30, the country’s “youth bulge” is not expected arrive at a more “normal” distribution much before 2050.  Considering that Iraq derives 97% of its foreign revenues from the sale of oil, and that oil accounts for only 1% of employment, clearly hydrocarbon production cannot address the problem of unemployment. 

With the Federal Government and the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) accounting for 65% of national employment, it is easy to understand why the focus of young people is obtaining a government job.  The relatively low salaries are offset by the lifetime employment and a guaranteed pension.  

Still, the public sector which was established after the 1958 coup which overthrew the Hashimite monarchy is highly inefficient and unable to generate new jobs.  As the number of youth graduating from secondary schools and universities continues to increase,  the public sector -which currently accounts for 4 of every 5 new jobs created – will be unable to keep up with the number of youth entering the employment market each year.

As an example of the efforts of Iraqi youth, one group of 3 began a school in a poor neighborhood of Baghdad where they offer classes for $5 per month (or free if the student’s family can’t afford that) where they teach K-12 youth, who are mostly from single parent homes or orphans, how to read and write Arabic and English and learn mathematics.  The school organizers all have government positions, in the Ministry of Oil, the Ministry of Education and secondary school system.
Dr. Yass al-Khafai, Dr. Sameh al-Muqdadi & Eric Davis
The school teaches mixed gender classes which sometime elicits opposition from parents.  However, mothers and fathers are invited to sit in the classes to see that mixing girls and boys isn’t a problem, and they learn in the process.  If a child doesn’t arrive to school on time, the team immediately contacts the parents to assure that the education process isn’t interrupted.

Another social entrepreneur has co-founded a series of book stalls, Daraj Books, in coffee shops throughout Baghdad.  Corner shelves display the books which customers are encouraged to browse while drink  tea or coffee.  The social entrepreneur who established this enterprise told me she is now trying to offer her clients access to e-books which they read online.

There is great concern among young Iraqis with environmental protection.  The air quality in parts of the country is unhealthy, such as the southern port city of Basra, due to the flaring of natural gas and the lack of environmental standards on automobile exhausts, and the need for countless generators to assure access to electricity which is only sporadically provided by the state-operated grid.

Thus, there was concern among many of the participants in the IPLP with recycling waste and finding ways to make it profitable in the process.  This idea isn’t new.  When I visited the KRG in 2004, I found a large recycling company run by a prominent Kurdish businessman and an Iraqi engineer from the city of Tikrit.  When I asked whether their different ethnic origins influenced their work, they were surprised, saying that theirs was a profit-making enterprise and one which they proudly indicated employed 25 youth in each of their recycling centers.
Campus of the American University of Sharjah
One participant has founded the first Green consulting firm in Iraq which is located in Erbil.  Her firm was impressive enough to lead the organizers of this year’s Davos Conference to invite her to present her start-up. 

An idea which was developed at the IPLP term in which I taught was to develop companies which would purchase waste materials thereby incentivizing recycling.  The proposed company would provide containers for customers  who joined the program.  The recyclables would be divided and then sold to the company by weight.
In my effort to provide assistance to the youth social entrepreneurs, I offered three PPT presentations.  The first, “Iraq’s Civilizational Contributions to the World,” was based on the assertion that effective social entrepreneurs need to feel a strong tie to and pride in their country.  Social entrepreneurship needs to be grounded in inspiration.  Having heard from many Iraqi youth interested in engaging in commercial enterprises that Iraq has no entrepreneurial, I felt that a review of its historical contributions was essential.

I offered what I called three educational modules which touched on different form of historical memory designed to  provide examples that Iraqis have, historically, been actively involved in wide ranging trade which in turn created great prosperity and stimulated innovation.
My presentation: "Iraq's Civilizational
Contributions  to the World"
One has only to turn to the many works of the late archaeologist, Sidney Noah Kramer, e.g., his History Begins at Sumer, to realize that Iraq’s ancient Mesopotamian civilizations were incredibly advanced for their times.  The Emperor Hammurabi invented the world’s first complete legal code (although archaeologist have found fragments of codes hundreds of years before Hammurabi) which is part of the majority of the world’s modern legal systems today.

Hammurabi developed the first concept of a contract. Another development was the development of the first language in the form of cuneiform.  These developments were stimulated by the extensive trade developed in Sumer which required merchants to develop forms of notation which would allow them to keep track of their products.  Beginning in ancient Mesopotamia, the peoples of the Fertile Crescent already had developed  a strong entrepreneurial spirit.

Innovation was certainly a characteristic of the early Abbasid Empire – the second educational module.  The Caliph al-Ma’mun was a ruler who was curious and fascinated by the acquisition of knowledge. It is well known that he sent his advisors to the far corners of the empire, including to south eastern Europe, to bring back all known knowledge of the world to have it translated and stored in a new library-university called the Bayt al-Hikma (House of Wisdom).

The third module focuses on the Iraqi nationalist movement between 1908 and 1963. This period is bracketed by the Young Turk Revolt in the Ottoman Empire which deposed the Sultan and the first Bacthist coup in February 1963 which overthrew the regime of General Abd al-Karim Qasim.  As I document in Memories of State: Politics, History and Collective Identity in Modern Iraq, the Iraqi nationalist movement which preceded Bacthist rule was viewed as highly threatening by Saddam Husayn, leading him to create the Project for the Rewriting of History of which he was president.

What threatened Saddam was precisely the values which characterized the pre-Bacthist era.  In its cross-ethnic nature, the nationalist movement reflected the interaction of Iraq’s ethnic and religious groups and the lack of hostility between them.  The period of the nationalist movement was characterized by a large and vigorous press and there was widespread associational behavior in the form of professional syndicates (al-niqabat al-mihaniya), large labor unions, women’s and student groups, and programmatic (non-elite) political parties, e.g., the Iraqi Communist Party and the National Democratic Party.

While the economy was overwhelmingly agrarian efforts were made to expand trade, develop an incipient industrial sector, and expand oil production.  The Baghdad Chamber Commerce reflected an amalgam of diverse ethnic groups.  Between 1937 and 1945, the president was a prominent Shici merchant, Jacfar Abu Timman and the majority of members were Iraqi Jews.

Indeed, parliamentary elections were held between 1925 and 1958.  While parliaments were continually dissolved by the dominant political elite at the time, and rural elections were controlled by tribal shaykhs, elections in many urban districts were fair and free.

All of this history diametrically opposed the repressive an authoritarian rule of Saddam and the Bacth.  Because so many youth today have only known Saddam’s rule and the corrupt and inefficient political system imposed on Iraq by the United States after it toppled Saddam in 2003, there is doubt whether Iraq is truly “ready” for democracy.

However, as I argued and everyone agreed, there is a strong correlation between a tolerant political culture, democratic governance and social justice in the form of government services and economic development and prosperity. 

Thus, when asking the group to discuss possible social entrepreneurial ventures, one suggestion I made was the creation of an educational website where secondary school teachers and university professors  could use to develop lesson plans for civic education (al-tarbiya al-wataniya).  A non-political site in the sense that it would avoid discussions of contemporary politics, it would instead offer analytic discussions f concepts such as pluralism, tolerance, respect for religious and cultural diversity, gender equality, personal freedoms, human rights and social democracy.

In the area of sustainable development, we discussed another project, namely one to provide solar panels for farmers to help gain easier and less costly access to water for irrigating their crops.  In Egypt, Karm Solar (Sharikat Karm li-l-Taqa al-Shamsiya) has been extremely successful in meeting this need of farmers despite the Egyptian military refusing to allow them access to the national electric grid.

The final project we discussed was that of a franchise developed by Iraqi women to provide nursery schools where women  could feel secure leaving their children while they went to work.  In may Arab countries, women constitute 70% of the undergraduate student population but a relatively small segment of the national work force. 

One of the main problems Iraqi women face is childcare.  Thus, having reliable nursery schools to which they could send their children represents a crucial component in addressing this problem which results in the loss of significant human resources in the Arab world due to the inability of skilled women to contribute to the national economy.

In some parts of the Arab world, women have obtained micro-loans in groups of 4 or 5 borrowers.  The default rates on these loans is very low, usually less than 1%.  I suggested to the IPLP group that this model could be employed in Iraq as a business model whereby a group of women in Iraq could fund such a franchise.  The nursey schools could provide children with heath care information, promote manual dexterity through supplying them with crayons and pencils and tech them rudimentary computer skills.

The Arab world suffers from economic stagnation.  Even where economic growth is robust, it is in oil-producing countries like Saudi Arabia and Qatar which constrain youth and discourage critical thinking skills.  This situation results in a huge loss of creative energy and human resources.  Social entrepreneurship is not a cure all – a ‘silver bullet” – but it does offer a an exciting way forward for the youth of the MENA region.





Caught in a Vise: Iraq between the United States and Iran in Their Struggle for the Middle East

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As the tension between the United States and Iran escalates, Iraq has been drawn into the conflict, despite the fact that the government of Prime Minister cAdil cAbd al-Mahdi and the Iraqi people have no appetite to become part of it.  How has the conflict’s dynamics affected Iraq?  What can Iraq do to avoid damaging its economy and political stability by becoming part of a struggle over which it has no control?

The Iranian regime has little support, either domestically or in the MENA region.  It is repressive, corrupt, and offers the Iranian populace little in the way of economic development, education or social services.  Its military involvement in Syria and Lebanon and financial support for irregular militias in Iraq, the Popular Mobilization Units (al-Hashad al-Shacbi) has only increased political instability in the Arab Mashriq, while draining economic resources at home.

Nevertheless, the Trump administration’s efforts to recruit Iraq in its struggle with Iran is counterproductive.  By pressuring Iraq to conform to the sanctions it has imposed on Iran, the Trump administration has made unreasonable demands on Iraq.  This is especially true in terms of Iraq’s extensive purchases of natural gas from Iran.  

Pressure is also being exerted to have Iraq reduce its financial and commercial exposure to Iran which provides 20% of Iraq’s electricity and whose construction companies are key in helping Iraq rebuild its infrastructure after decades of war and neglect by the state.

Why does Iran want to maintain political influence in Iraq?  First, Iraq provides an important land bridge which is critical to Iran’s efforts to create “strategic depth” by maintaining a corridor to the Mediterranean. To institutionalize this strategic depth, Iran supports the Bacthist regime of Bashar al-Asad in Syria and Hizballah in Lebanon, in addition to 3 of the most powerful Shica militias in Iraq.

Second, Iraq provides an important vehicle to allow Iran to sidestep the increasingly onerous sanctions which the US has imposed on it.  Goods which Iran is unable to obtain in the world market can, in certain instances, be acquired through the Iraqi market. Finally, Iraq continues to offer Iran a critical market in which it can sell its manufactured, agricultural and energy products, especially natural gas which Iraq requires to power its national grid.

Third, Iran seeks to use its political influence in Iran to prevent a hostile regime, like that of former Iraqi dictator, Saddam Husayn, from come to power in Baghdad.  Likewise, Iran seeks to maintain a powerful position in the Shica shrine cities, especially in al-Najaf, the center of global Shiism, and Karbala’, both in south central Iraq.  If Iran can play a role in selecting the key religious clerics in al-Najaf, then it can mobilize this influence to promote itself among the world’s Shica population.

It is less clear what US national interests are in Iraq, aside from its current interest in using it as part of its policy to bring the Iranian regime to its knees.  Any concern with promoting democracy in Iraq died long ago, if in fact that ever was a goal of the Bush administration’s 2003 invasion.  

The Obama administration wanted nothing to do with Iraq. Its foolish decision to enable Nuri al-Maliki to secure a second term as prime minister in 2010, even though he lost national elections, came back to haunt Iraq and the US in 2014 when his arch-sectarian policies led to the fall of Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, to the Dacish.

Certainly, the Trump administration has shown no interest whatsoever in Iraq’s form of governance, whether democratic, sectarian or authoritarian.  Indeed, the Trump administration lacks a coherent foreign policy in the MENA region, including Iraq.  All decisions are largely ad hoc and transactional, constantly in flux, and without historical grounding or cultural understanding.

Examining the Trump administration’s position on Iran, we can ask whether it seeks regime change, as National Security Advisor John Bolton advocates, or does it support a exclusively sanctions-based policy as advocated by Trump (although his views on foreign policy change with great frequency, often day by day). 

Because the Trump administration is unclear on its objectives in Iran, that fact is all the more reason why Iraq seeks to avoid tying its fortunes to the US in this struggle.  Iraq will always need to live with and accommodate its powerful neighbor to the east, while the Trump administration may be gone after the 2020 presidential elections.

Increasingly, Iraq has become a pawn in a Trump administration game designed to bring Iran to its knees. This effort seems less a developed and well-thought through policy or strategy, with clearly defined goals and implementation process, than a set of tactics designed to bolster Trump’s political support with certain constituencies in the United States as part of his 2020 re-election campaign.  

Trump’s almost exclusive focus is on the trifecta of Saudi Arabia, Israel and the United Arab Emirates bears out this argument. 
Strong support for these 3 countries, all of which are extremely hostile to Iran, bolsters Trump’s position among evangelical Christians, one of his core constituencies, and, he hopes, among large segments of the American Jewish community.  

By pushing arms sales to Saudi Arabia and the Arab Gulf states, even without Congressional approval, Trump can argue that his administration has created jobs.  Never mind that these arms are bringing death, devastation and the largest humanitarian crisis in the world to Yemen, and that the war is creating fertile ground for a new generation of terrorists who will plague Yemen, the region and future US administrations.

Current US behavior towards Iraq indicates a lack of sensitivity to diplomatic protocols. It likewise demonstrates a lack of cultural sensitivities to a country which was placed under American occupation from 2003 to 2011, and which suffered greatly from US bombing during the Gulf War of 1991.  

Diplomatic consultations have languished as Trump administration behavior towards the current government of Prime Minister cAdil cAbd al-Mahdi have taken on the character of “informing” the Iraqi government of the steps it needs to take to help the Trump administration isolate Iran politically and economically.

Trump’s recent decision to end sanctions waivers will cause Iranian oil exports to decline between 26-31%. Key industries - like the petrochemical, car and construction industries, which are highly dependent on imported equipment, spare parts and raw materials - are also suffering from the depreciation of the Iranian currency, which last year lost more than 100 percent of its value, significantly decreasing the purchasing power of Iranian companies on the international market.

Iraq has an unemployment rate of 25% in January 2019.  Iraq cannot afford more economic pressure if the US tries to disengage the Iraqi from the Iranian economy. Because the sanctions the Trump administration has imposed on Iran are achieving the goal of increasing its economic pain, there is no need to force Iraq to sanction Iran as well.

Trump’s populist project, inspired by former advisor Steven Bannon and current advisor Stephen Miller, eschew international agreements. This hostility to international cooperation is part of the ethic nationalism which is surging in many countries around the world, e.g., as seen in the recent re-election of Narendra Modi in India.  Such nationalism may help mobilize voting constituencies domestically, but are proving to be disastrous when they become a framing device for international politics.

As an example of the problems of conducting foreign policy on a country-by-country basis and transactional basis, devoid of international cooperation, and with little or no reference to prior efforts to solve a specific global problem, we can cite the Trump administration policy towards North Korea.  

Having invested his political capital and personal ego in coming to an agreement whereby the North Korean regime will agree to give up its nuclear weapons and create a nuclear weapons free Korean Peninsula, Trump now finds himself defending Kim Jong-on’s missile tests while castigating Iran which has yet to develop nuclear weapons.

This type of chaotic foreign policy is harming US national interests, not only in the MENA region but, as many analysts have noted, is also impeding the struggle against China’s global ambitions.  The idea that the United States can promote its national interests in isolation, without its traditional allies and the United Nations is deeply flawed.  If the US has remained in the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), rather than withdraw, it would have had 11 partner nations to help in the struggle against China.

If the Trump administration would work with the EU and NATO, it could produce a truly meaningful strategy to prevent Iran from destabilizing the eastern Mediterranean region.  Likewise, it would reduce the possibility of other regional powers, especially Saudi Arabia and Turkey, from developing nuclear weapons should Iran decide to no longer abide by the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), agreed to by the Obama administration, the EU, Russia and China.

If, through the refusal to develop a policy towards Iran, which will curb its adventurism and prevent it from developing nuclear weapons, the Trump administration needs to return to the international community and work with partners – partners which have been faithful allies since the end of WWII. 

Trump should be educated on the complexities of Iraqi politics and society. The Federal Government in Baghdad is still fighting the Islamic State (which is burning crops in north central Iraq), trying to conclude an agreement with the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) on the federal budget, the sale of oil, and the contours of federalism, and confronting the problem of raising between $88 and $100 billion to rebuild the devastated city of Mosul and much of al-Anbar, Salahidin and al-Niniwa provinces, not to speak of pressing infrastructure needs elsewhere in the country.

Strategy needs to replace tactics. Unannounced or sudden visits to Iraq, such as Trump’s visit to US troops after Christmas in December 2018 when he didn’t exercise the courtesy of visiting the Iraqi leadership in Bagdad, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s peripatetic visits, need to end because all they do is provide political ammunition for Iran’s allies in Iraq who would like to see US troops leave Iraq and curtail its influence in the country.

Iraq and the United States must be equal partners if the Trump administration is able to achieve any of its objectives in the eastern Mediterranean and the Gulf region






What wrong with Basra? How a toxic brew of global warming, corruption and sectarian politics threatens Iraq

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Protests against sub-standard social services, Basra, June 29, 2019
Recently, I attended a panel discussion on Iraq’s port city of Basra held at the Middle East Institute in Washington, DC.  While well aware of the problems facing Basra, I was unprepared to learn how bad conditions in the city have become.  The questions raised by current economic, environmental and health threats are not only highly problematic for the city, but suggest what could be the fate of MENA region and other port cities situated in hot climates throughout the world. 


Not only are residents deprived of essential services, often a threat to their health and even lives, but they inhabit areas prone to ongoing conflict and civil strife.  Basra has become the “perfect storm,” reflecting a problem which not only adversely affects Iraq, but many other countries and one which will spread as global warming and drought begin to take hold in many hot areas of the world.  Given these conditions, the danger is obviously the spread of civil strife. What the can we learn from Basra?

First, Basra has been the epicenter of wars and civil conflict since the 1980s.  Having visited the city during the spring of 1980, just prior to Saddam Husayn’s invasion of Iran, the city still lived up to its reputation as the “Venice of the Middle East,” given its many canals and economic dependence on the. Shatt al-cArab (the confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers before they enter the Persian Gulf). 

All this changed after the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-1988 in which the Basra region was severely damaged by the attacks by each side on the oil facilities located at the northern tip of the Persian Gulf.  Basra was almost cut off from the rest of Iraq during the Iranian invasion of 1984 when Iranian forces sought to seize the Fao Peninsula.  During the war, the Shatt al-cArab was blocked due to the sinking of many ships located in the port of Basra.

Basra is Iraq’s only major port and key access point for exporting oil. The devastation wrought on the Basra region by the Iran-Iraq War, which destroyed much of the oil industry’s infrastructure, was only made worse by the UN coalition's bombing during the Gulf War of January 1991.   Matters came to a head when Iraq’s conscript army, retreating through Basra from Kuwait after the US led coalition’s victory, spurred a large uprising - the  March 1991 Intifada) - which almost toppled Saddam Husayn and resulted in even more destruction, especially in the south of Iraq.

The US invasion of 2003 could have helped Basra rebuild if the large amount of reconstruction funds authorized by the US Congress had been spent on projects to improve the city’s water, electricity and health infrastructure.  We know in retrospect that the contracts awarded to US corporations by the Bush administration lacked a bidding process. Of the funds allocated, much were designed to improve the bottom line of the corporations receiving the award, and not Iraq’s needs.  Often projects weren’t even completed.  In short, the US invasion of Iraq failed to help Basra recover from the devastation of the Iran-Iraq War, the Gulf War and the March 1991 Intifada.

After the toppling of Saddam in 2003, Basra became locked in multiple political struggles.  One pitted the US occupying authority against Iran which quickly became a major player in post-invasion Iraqi politics.  Another pitted  local tribal leaders against one another as they tried to gain control of reconstruction funds and the local economy, and became involved in widespread smuggling. Yet another conflict, more traditional in nature, pitted the Basra region against Baghdad, much like the conflict between Bagdad and Erbil, the seat of the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG). Traditionally, Basra region has felt marginalized by Baghdad.  Finally, a political struggle developed between Shi'a political parties and militias to control the city’s lucrative economy.

Meanwhile, conditions for residents of Basra have continued to deteriorate.  Between August and November 2018, 100,000 Basra area residents were treated for water poisoning (Reuters 2018). No one can explain why 13 water treatment plants completed in 2006 are still not functioning.  Ministry of Health data show Basra’s tap water’s chemical contamination level is 100% while its bacterial content stands at 50%. 

The main problem is the dependence of Basra and the surrounding region on the Shatt al-cArab for its fresh water supply.  However, with the drought which has plagued Iraq since 2007 and the damming of the Euphrates River in Turkey, the Shatt al-cArab has shrunken in size enabling saline water to enter from the Persian Gulf.  Not only has this process irreparable damaged the date industry along the river, but is has decreased the availability of fresh water.  Iraq's Ministry of Water Resources indicated in 2018 that Iraq's river had lost 40% of their water during the past 20 years.  Iraq's farmland is shrinking by 5% each year. Iraq's water crisis is intensifying

As noted by the panelists at the Middle East Institute forum, many farmers in the Basra region suffer not only from water shortages but from toxic chemicals which have entered their cropland.  Iraq's fishermen, both those who formerly fished in Iraq's famed marshlands (al-ahwar), and in the Shatt al-cArab and Persian Gulf have abandoned fishing because it no longer provides a livelihood for their families. As many have tried to become farmers, that has created conflict with farmers who already own land.

After Saddam’s ouster, a new patronage system was established in Basra.  Local residents became dependent on political parties and later militias for jobs and social services. Thus, when conditions began to seriously worsen, many Basrawis were initially reluctant to join demonstrations protesting the lack of electricity during the brutally hot summer.  Because parties and militias often threatened protestors, the prospect of being attacked for joining a demonstration was a deterrent.

However, that has all changed this year.  With temperatures recently reaching 120 degrees (49 degrees Celsius), demonstration have been ongoing with security forces using live ammunition to contain them.  The intensify and size of the demonstrations threatens the government of Prime Minister  'Adil 'Abd al-Mahdi. Two parties, the Sadrist Trend, led by Muqtada al-Sadr, and the Hikma Party, led by 'Ammar al-Hakim have been highly critical of the government in Baghdad and its inability to address Basra’s problems.

What then do conditions in Basra tell us about Iraqi politics and what are its implications for urban areas in similar climate zones elsewhere?  First, it shows the limits of sectarian “divide and conquer” politics.  With conditions in Basra having reached a tipping point which now makes them intolerable to all inhabitants, trying to set different groups against one another politically, whether by sect, ethnicity or tribal affiliation, seems to have run its course and no longer be effective. 

Second, the Basra crisis demonstrates the extent to which global warming has profound implications for the politics of nation-states in zones where such warming threatens local residents' ability to remain in their places of residence.  With water supplies increasingly limited, and food contaminated with toxins also a problem, a national effort will need to be made in such conditions to prevent economic and social dislocation from creating civil strife and political instability.

Third, many LDCs will soon discover that they cannot afford to sustain a highly corrupt and nepotistic form of politics which undermines the central state’s ability to address problems created by climate change.  The threats caused by global warming have yet to be frontally addressed by political analysts.  However, as the deteriorating living conditions in Basra clearly indicate, central states ignore problems caused by climate change at their own peril.  Indeed, the government of Prime Minister 'Adil 'Abd al-Mahdi faces a threat of collapse, in large measure, due to its inability to solve the Basra crisis.

Finally, Iraq may find that its key source of revenues, namely its ex[rot of oil, is disrupted if social and economic conditions in basra continue to deteriorate.  Already, oil companies, such as Exxon Mobil, have withdrawn from efforts to drill in the Basra region. With Iraq dependent for more than 95% of its foreign revenues on sales of oil in the world market, such a development would pose extremely serious problems.

As it is, the demonstrations in Basra have weakened the Federal Government in Baghdad.  Prime Minister 'Adil 'Abd al-Mahdi will find it more difficult to arrive at an accommodation with the KRG about the status of Kurdish oil production and the distribution of revenues from its sale. He will also find it more difficult to fend off efforts by Iran and the United States to influence his policy decisions




The Popular Mobilization Units: A Threat to the Development of Political Stability and Democracy in Iraq?

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The flag of Iraq's Popular Mobilization Units (al-Hashad al-Sha'bi
Max Weber famously defined the state as that "human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of violence within a given territory."  Many states have not been afforded this luxury.  An example is Italy where what began as social movements to provide services and protection for local constituencies, such as La Cosa Nostra (Mafia), Camorra and ‘Ndrangheta, later morphed into organizations specializing in protecting powerful and wealthy clients, becoming a nationally powerful crime syndicates in the process.

Iraq has likewise seen the rise of powerful militias, the Popular Mobilization Units (PMUs) or 
al-Hashad al-Shacbisince they were established following a fatwa(religious decree) from Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani in 2014.  For a discussion of the Islamic State’s rise, see my A Comprehensive Plan to Defeat the Islamic State



The PMUs, which number 60 odd militias at the moment, are mostly Shi a but include some Sunni, Christian, Yazidi and Turkmen units as well. The key concern is that the PMUs are designated by the Iraqi government as “state affiliated organizations.” This means in effect that they are largely independent of central government control.

What are the implications for the Iraqi state being unable to control these armed militias, some of which are transforming themselves into economic actors.  To what extent is a state within a state being built in Iraq?  Can the PMUs be brought under control or are they now a permanent fixture of Iraq’s political system?

On July 1, 2019, Iraqi Prime Minister Adil Abd al-Mahdi announced that all PMUs would be brought under control of the central government.  Many Iraqi and non-Iraqi analysts were skeptical that cAbd al-Mahdi proclamation would have any serious impact on the PMUs. This is especially true in light of the criticism of cAbd al-Mahdi’s cabinet which, to date, has failed to implement the reforms it promised when it took office.

Recently, Falih al-Fayyad, National Security Advisor, indicated that all PMU “offices” in Iraqi cities and towns must close their offices and their members must remove themselves from urban areas to designated bases.  What seems of greatest concern underlying this decision is that the PMUs have become actively involved in Iraq’s economic and financial affairs.  While they were originally formed as defensive units, they now are trying to translate that legitimacy into economic gain.  Reflecting a growing concern, Ayatollah cAli al-Sistani issued a statement in April 2019 warning the PMUs to “stay away from economics.”

In the process of policing Iraq’s cities, such as Mosul which was recaptured from the Dacish in 2017,  the PMUs have established “committees” (lijan) or “offices” (maktabib). This unofficial organizations have acting engaged in raising funds. To cover the high costs of sustaining the militias as well as providing the PMU leaders with lucrative salaries.  PMUs engage in trade, auctions, and real estate transactions.  Thus, the Iraqi governments efforts to close these offices in urban areas is to prevent the PMUs from entrenching its economic power.

Mosul offers the PMUs lucrative business opportunities. With massive reconstruction underway, the PMUs have pushed their way into the process using force and blackmail to control the flow of funds coming into the city.  Business owners in Mosul complain that the PMUs subject them to extortion and often force them to take on a militia as a commercial partner.

For example, Ikhlas al-Dulaymi, a parliamentarian from Ninawa province, accused Qais al-Khazali, 
leader of  the Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq militia, of forcing a Mosul business man of accepting it as a partner 
with a 30% stake in the contract. al-Dulaymi also implied that the sinking of a ferry in the Tigris  
River in March, 2019, which caused 103 deaths, was not due to navigational negligence but the 
security problems created by the PMUs in the city.

Also disturbing to Iraqis and their governments is the control over territories by the PMUs which 
are off limits to the Iraqi Army or government officials. The most well know is the city of Jarf al-Sakhr, in the northern part of Babil Province, which the PMUs have controlled since 2014.  The city’s 100,000 residents have yet to be able to return to their homes.
 On several occasions, Iraqi Army units, parliamentarians and other government officials have been 
prevented from entering the city.  This has made many Iraqi politicians and analysts believe that the 
city has prisons, and makes weapons and explosives in workshops with material supplied by Iran. 
Indeed, Jarf al-Sakhr is an example of a “mini” state within a state. 
 


The Return of the Da'ish and What Must Be Done to Stop It

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The world rejoiced when Iraq’s Counter Terrorism Services (CTS) defeated Dacish forces in Mosul in November 2017 and subsequently captured the terrorists' last holdout, al-Baghuz Fawqani, along the Euphrates River, in March 2019.  Donald Trump was quick to declare that the Islamic State had been “totally destroyed.”  Vice President Mike Pence and other administration figures, such as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, repeated the mantra that the “Caliphate has been defeated.”

Military and political analysts on the ground knew these statements were premature.  All reacted with concern when Trump declared that the 2,000 US troops stationed in north eastern Syria could now be withdrawn and brought home because they were no longer needed.  Thinking about the struggle against the Islamic State in conventional military terms, and trying to score political points domestically, Trump, Pence and Pompeo have set the stage for yet another American foreign policy disaster in the Middle East.

What threat does the Dacish pose to Iraq, Syria and other parts of the MENA region?  What can and should be done to meet that threat? What role should Iraq, the US and the international community play in this process? 

A US Department of Defense Inspector General’s report in April 2019 noted that the Islamic State was far from defeated. With its sleeper cells, and financial assets estimated to reach as much as $400 million, it still poses a serious threat to Iraq and eastern Syria, and other parts of the MENA region such as Libya and the Sinai Peninsula Inspector General Department of Defense Operation Inherent Resolve - Quarterly Report April-June, 2019

The Report notes that IS has between 11,000 and 14,000 fighters and continues to carry out targeted assassinations, kidnappings, destruction of infrastructure and the burning of crops.  It has established safe houses in rural Sunni majority populated areas in western and north eastern Iraq and continues its recruitment efforts.

A recent visit by Voice of America journalists to Raqqa, the former capital of Dacish so-called Caliphate, demonstrates the threat which western Syria and north central Iraq still face from the terrorist organization. Few Raqqans were willing to discuss their experiences under Dacish rule. In his fortified municipal The mayor of Raqqa indicated that many Raqqan residents still sympathize with the Dacish and that his offices have been subject to multiple attacks.  Syria's Raqqa Struggles to Recover, 2 Years After ISIS' ouster

Even though Raqqa is no longer under control of the terrorists, the constraints fear has imposed on the city has effectively prevented rebuilding the city and the local economy.  What the Trump administration refuses to acknowledge is that the drivers of support for terrorist organizations like the IS must be addressed.  Otherwise the notion of “defeat” is meaningless.

Three conditions - military, political and material - must be met if the terrorist threat facing eastern Syria and Iraq is to be seriously addressed.  First, the Iraqi Army must be reconstituted to be able to eliminate the Dacish's miltary capacity. Second, the local populaces who still support the Dacish must be weaned away from that support. Finally, reconstruction must take place so that the residents of the areas formerly controlled by the Dacish can feel that there is hope for the future.

The importance of the military is evident from the defeat of the Dacish in Mosul by Iraq’s Counter-Terrorism Services (CTS) and in eastern Syria by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).  In both cases, US troops were critical in training both military forces. 

The ignominious defeat of the Iraq Army in Mosul in June 2014 stands in sharp contrast to the victory of the CTS in Mosul in in November 2017.  Prior to the fll of Mosul in 2014, former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki had converted the army units in the city and its environs into sectarian force which focused on extracting rents from the local populace rather than acting as national defense force.  

Ostensibly consisting of 30,00 troops, at least on paper, and possessing some of the latest US military hardware, including  MRAPs, the Iraq Army was routed by a lightly armed Dacish force of 800-1000 fighters on Toyota pickup trucks armed with machine guns. (For a description of Mosul's seizure by the Dacish, see my A Tale of Two States: Iraq and the IS)

In 2017, CTS forces attacked Mosul and, after intense combat, were able to defeat the  Dacish. One key difference between the Iraqi Army units in Mosul in 2014 was the training of the new CTS units by US forces and the appointment of an Iraqi commander, Lt. General Abd al-Wahhab al-Sacdi, who make it clear that his policy was “zero tolerance” for sectarianism among his troops.

Indeed, Iraqi students at Rutgers who had relatives in Mosul ath time of the attack indicated that their families were terrified at the prospect of the city being attacked by the Iraqi Army, not because they sympathized with the Dacish, but because they feared a sectarian blood bath.  Since most of the Iraqi forces were Shica, they feared the army would see Moslawis as collaborators with the Dacish, remembering the brutal killing of 1500 Iraqi troops in June 2014 who were selected to be shot simply based on their religious sect as Shica.

To these Moslawi families' great surprise, the CTS not only acted in a professional manner but fought methodically street to street to minimize civilian casualties, taking very high casualties of their own. Residents of liberated areas were given food and medicine, treated with respect and offered the option to move to a new tent city outside Mosul while the battle continued.  Understandably, the attitudes of Mosul’s resident turned from fear of the invading forces to great joy that they had been liberated from the hated Dacish and had not experienced any sectarian backlash in the process.

The political dimension in defeating terrorism is just as important as military proficiency. This is evident by comparing the defeat of the Dacish in Mosul to its defeat in eastern Syria.  The lion’s share of that effort was borne by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).  Although the SDG, like the CTS, benefitted from US training, but despite including Arab fighters, the SDF was controlled by the Rojava Kurds in the autonomous region they created in north eastern Syria, the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria.

The residents of Raqqa don't identify with the Rojava Kurds who have been politically and socially marginalized by the al-Asad regime, deprived of Syrian citizenship and had their lands seized by the state.  Thus, it has been much harder for the SDF to develop ties to Arabs liberated from the Dacish  in Syria than it has for the Iraqi Army to develop good relations with the residents of Mosul. It is noticeable that there have few examples of the resurgence of the Dacish in Mosul compared to Raqqa.

Nevertheless, the Rojava Kurds, unlike the Iraqi government which has not offered captured IS fighters meaningful due process, has refused to execute captured IS fighters and instead has handed down short 2-3 year jail sentences to those convicted of crimes. Subsequently they have attempted to create an environment of reconciliation with the former terrorists.  This process stands in sharp contrast to the Iraqi court system where trials, often lasting only a few minutes and with defendants not having met with their attorneys prior to appearing in court, have resulted in numerous execution verdicts.

The United Nations, with the support of the US and EU, needs to encourage the Iraqi government to convene behind the scenes meetings involving Sunni and Shica clerics and tribal leaders.  Using a “bottom up” approach, which involves listening to and valorizing the concerns of residents living in areas which have experienced extensive destruction, such meetings could be used to establish informal working groups to confront the needs of displaced persons and to give residents of formerDacish controlled areas, who are predominantly Sunni, from feeling that they have no role to play in the Iraqi political system.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration is only contributing to increasing the power of Iraq’s sectarian entrepreneurs, socially those who have political and financial ties to the Iranian government. Allowing Israel to bomb ammunition dumps of Popular Mobilization Units (PMUs) in Iraq was extremely foolish because it provided fuel for those members of Iraq’s political class who have been pushing for the removal of US troops and a reduction of American influence in the country,

Finally, material resources will be critical to the final elimination of the Dacish. Iraq has estimated that it needs between $88-$100 billion to rebuild Mosul and those sections of north central Iraq. With an estimated number of displaced persons in excess of 4.5 million  Iraqis, many of whom have no permanent residences much less access to education, health care and other social services. A conference in Kuwait in February 2019 failed to raise anywhere near the funds needed for post-Dacish reconstruction.

In this area of needs, the Trump administration has been severely wanting. There has been little if no public discussion of Iraq’s reconstruction needs. Unless the US and the international community steps up to assist Iraq in the reconstruction process, the displaced Iraqis in the north central provinces will provide fertile soil not just for the Da ish, but myriad criminal and extremist organizations, especially those who appeal to Iraqi youth.



Impeachment, the Iran Crisis and US Foreign Policy in the Middle East

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What impact will the soon to commence impeachment inquiry, conducted by the US House of Representatives, have on the foreign policy of the United States?  Specifically, how will it affect the ongoing crisis with Iran and US relations with Saudi Arabia and American allies in the Persian Gulf?  What do recent developments in the Trump presidency tell about the manner in which populist leaders conduct foreign policy?

There is little disagreement that US foreign policy under the Trump administration has been dysfunctional.  Positions on key US foreign policy issues, e.g., US attitudes towards the North Korean regime of Kim Jong-un, have changed from month to month, sometimes week to week.  Except for the trade war with China, a pet peeve of Donald Trump, there is nothing approaching the most skeletal form of a “Trump Doctrine.”

Many key ambassadorial positions still have not been filled since Donald Trump took office and key policies which might address some of Trump’s concerns, such as what he refers to as a “migrant crisis” at the US-Mexican border, namely economic and law enforcement aid to address unemployment and the power of drug gangs in Central America, have been cut or eliminated.

Nowhere has the chaotic nature of US foreign policy been more on display than in the Middle East.  The haste with which Trump declared that the Dacish (Islamic State) “completely defeated” failed to show any understanding of the fact that the terrorists had faded into sympathetic communities in Northeastern Syria and North Central Iraq. His subsequent decision to withdraw 2000 US advisors from northern Syria who have played a key role in helping the Syrian Democratic Forces defeat the Dacish constituted another indication of his complete lack of understanding of the continuing threat played by terrorist in Syria and Iraq.

Trump’s decision to withdraw from the JCPOA, which was designed to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, has only divided US allies who signed onto the accord and put the US at odds with Russia and China which support it.  While many nations in the MENA region resent Iranian sending troops to support the genocidal regime of Bashar a-Asad, as well as interfering in Iraqi and Lebanese domestic politics, an international sanctions regime would have been much more effective in pushing Iran to pull back from such interference if it had left the JCPOA in place.  Withdrawing from the JCPOA, which the International Atomic Energy Agency said Iran had scrupulously adhered to, served to make it all the more difficult for Iran to reduce its regional meddling because it would appear to be weak and caving in to US pressure.

A targeted but low key sanctions policy, deployed through a multi-lateral framework, but without all the bluster by Trump over the JCPOA (which he seems to have more against because it was enacted by Barak Obama than based on any well thought-through logic).  In the context of the US-Iranian crisis engendered by Trump and his key foreign policy advisors, the US appears weaker not stronger in it struggle with Iran. 

The US failed to respond when the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IGRC) seized a British tanker or when the Iranians shot down a US drone. After threatening to attack Iran in retaliation, Trump abruptly cancelled the attack to chagrin of the US military.  In the process, it sent an inadvertently but powerful message to the US; Saudi and Gulf allies.  There is no US “security umbrella” which will guarantee the protection of the Saudi or Gulf monarchies from an Iranian attack.

The impeachment inquiry, raising from the transcript, which have emerged from Trump’s telephone call on July 25, 2019 with the recently elected Ukrainian presented Zelensky, detailing Trump’s effort to use the Ukrainian leader to gather political dirt on Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and his son Hunter, have thrown the White House into a frenzy.  Trump’s daily behavior has never been structured.  However, from the time the news an anonymous whistle-blower’s report was given to Congress by the Inspector-General of the Directory of National Intelligence until now, trump’s outbursts and behavior have become even more erratic than usual.

The war in Yemen recently saw the withdrawal of UAE troops from the conflict as its interests have come to diverge with Saudi Arabia, especially in newly contested areas in south Yemen.  The UAE withdrawal, and the inability of the Saudis to defeat the Houthis through an air war, had some analysts envisioning a possible opening for finally being the warring parties to the negotiating table.  With the Trump White House under siege and Mike Pompeo and Mike Pence also implicated in the Ukraine debacle, there is no possibility that the US will be playing any significant role in the Yemen War anytime soon.

The September 17, 2019 Israeli elections also threw a monkey wrench in Trump’s plan to enhance his reelection chances in 2020. Having angered many neo-conservatives by his refusal to call out Vladimir Putin for interfering in US elections (and even telling Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, that he didn’t find such interference problematic since the US does it in foreign elections as well), and his playing up to North Korean dictator, Kim Jong-un, Trump hoped that his strong ties to Benjamin Netanyahu would provide him the bona fides to offset his behavior towards two states which the US foreign policy community overwhelmingly consider to be US enemies.

With another crisis now brewing in Egypt, with demonstrations against the regime of General Abd al-Fatah al-Sisi, due to the lack of jobs for youth, the best the US could do was to issue a statement asking the Egyptian governments to allow peaceful demonstrations to take place.  Egypt, together with Israel and Saudi Arabia, comprise the US’ three most important allies in the Middle East. All three states are facing problems of different orders of magnitude.  But don’t expect the Trump administration to offer any guidance on how to deal with these problems.

As I have argued elsewhere, populist leaders like Trump are self-centered and transactional in their behavior, which means that they never adopt a long-view of domestic or foreign policies.  This lacuna represents their Achilles heel. As Steve Bannon noted, describing Boris Johnson and Trump, “They’re both showmen, they’re both performers. The trouble is, that gets you elected, but it doesn’t help you govern.”

What we can expect in this fall is a further retreat of the US from the foreign policy arena and an ever greater opening for two authoritarian powers, China and Russia in particular, to fill the vacuum.


مقتل أبو بكر البغدادي ومظاهرات الشباب في العراق . The Killing of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and the Youth Demonstrations in Iraq

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What is the relationship between the killing of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and the ongoing youth demonstrations in Iraq?  On first reflection, al-Baghdadi’s death and the youth protests might seem to be two discrete events. However, they are intimately linked.  They are the opposite side of the same coin.al-Baghdadi’s Dacish represents an effort to seduce Muslim youth into believing in a culture of violence, brutality and nihilism.  Dacish ideology seeks to ensnare youth by offering them a false sense of place and security. Once they join the terrorist group become situated in its hermetically sealed ideological bubble, escape is not an option, as many youth who have tried have discovered, being killed in the process.  Inside the so-called “Caliphate,” life was highly regimented with youth having to follow the rigid dictates of Dacish commanders.
The contrast between the Dacish’s vision of the future and that of youth demonstrations in Iraq could not pose a sharper contrast.  The youth demonstrators offer a completely different vision of the society they seek to build and, as the generation in waiting, will ultimately lead. The goal of Iraqi youth is not to force their peers to think and behave in lockstep according to a rigid and destructive ideology.  They long for freedom, the opportunity to express their individuality and creativity, gain employment through the skills they develop, and hence lay the basis for a future built on hope.
Youth who join the Dacish or other terrorist organizations face a very different reality.  They are told what to think and how to behave.  Their ideological socialization is one based on rigid binaries in which the world is divided between Good and Evil, with much greater attention devoted to what is Evil, namely those groups who pose a threat to the “true Islam” and therefore need to be killed.
In the vocabulary of the “Caliphate,” nuance, critical thinking and creativity don’t exist. To the extent that Dacish members employ their individual skills, they are directed towards manipulating social media, bombings, executions and criminal activity. For youth, membership in the Dacish is the antithesis of personal growth and self-development.
The allure of terrorism is based on the following the “equation” which undermines democratization and opens a political space for extremist ideologies: A “youth bulge,” plus lack of jobs,  plus sub-standard social services, plus government corruption are inversely correlated with the growth of extremism.  If we add to this mix the classic “J-curve” theory of revolutions, we learn that when a demographic, whether youth, a social class or ethnoreligious group, feels that socioeconomic conditions have the possibility to improve, but fail to be realized, anger and
The greater the degree to which youth in the MENA region, Africa and other parts of the world lack hope in the future, the greater the degree to which they become susceptible to the siren song of extremist messaging.  Put differently, heinous charlatans like al-Baghdadi, so-called “Caliph Ibrahim,” would find few takers if the political class in MENA region and African countries didn’t base their regimes on massive corruption and nepotism. With few alternatives available to force these elites to change their policies, terrorist organizations often become the only option for expressing discontent and anger.
The 800 Pound Gorilla in the room – to use an American colloquialism – is the political class which is the object of the youth demonstrations in Iraq and whose behavior provides fertile soil and nourishment for terrorist leaders like al-Baghdadi, al-Zarqawi, Bin Ladin et al.  Whether they rule “rentier states,” such as Iraq, where oil provides 95% of the state’s foreign revenues, or countries with more modest resources such as Lebanon, the local political class fleeces the privy purse and ensures that choice positions in the state apparatus go to their relatives and clients.
These corrupt political classes don’t just steal from the privy purse. They also promote “divide and conquer” politics as they work to silo different ethnic groups and religious sects along vertical lines. Their efforts here are to set sectors of society off against each other and undermine their ability to create horizontal coalitions across ethnic, sect and regional lines.  
One of the main complicating factors in Iraq’s youth protests are the Iran-backed militias which have been posting snipers on buildings to shoot the demonstrators.  These militias – Hadi al-cAmiri’s Badr Organization of, Kata’ib Hizballah, led by Abu Mahdi Muhandis and the Asa’ib Ahl al-Haqq (League of the Righteous People) run by Qais Khazzali – have been the target of youth demonstrators who have shouted “Iran out of Iraq.”  The militias in turn have accused the youth demonstrators of spreading discord (al-fitna[1]) and serving the interests of Israel.  
These comments point to the militias as reflecting Iranian interests.  They realize that should the Iraqi political system be reformed, they would potentially lose their privileged position, both in terms of political power in Iraq but also financial contributions from the regime in Tehran and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
After the Iranian Consulate in Karbala’ was sacked on October 26th, and the Iraqi flag raised in place of the Iranian flag, men in masks arrived on the scene to shot at demonstrators. There is much evidence that Iranian-backed militias are actively opposing the efforts of the demonstrators. Indeed, this past Wednesday Qassem Solimani, the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps’ Quds Force, visited Iraq to prevent the removal of Prime Minister cAdil cAbd al-Mahdi.
The juxtaposition if the Dacish with the crisis in Iraq points to the difficulties facing youth in the region.  Joining terrorist organizations may offer youth a temporary “shot in the arm” by making them feel empowered by suddenly carrying arms and becoming part of a group of equally disaffected youth. However, their life as a terrorist is usually, to paraphrase Thomas Hobbes, “nasty, brutish and short.”
Youth demonstrating for change in quasi-democratic societies, such as Iraq and Lebanon, can also be killed -we’ve already seen over 250 youth killed in Iraq at the time of this writing – but there is the possibility for peaceful action which has a better chance of bringing about change that exercising brutality and violence.
What can youth do through organizing peaceful demonstrations?  They can engage in creative behavior which allow them to connect to other sectors of society. Youth in Iraq and Lebanon have used dancing, music , poetry and a raft of other social celebratory activities to deflect criticism of their demonstrations and to convey symbolically to the populace at large that their anger is being channeled in constructive rather than destructive directions.
Youth unemployment is high in Iraq but declined slightly from 2018 to October 2019.  What seems to have been a key tipping point was the effective dismissal of Lt. Gen. cAbd al-Wahhab al-Sacadi, the head of Iraq’s storied Counter-Terrorism Services (CTS) who is considered to be a national hero for his role in defeating the Dacish in Mosul and north central Iraq. al-Sacadi was removed from his command and transferred to a desk job I the Ministry of Defense, effectively terminating his military career. 
If Iraq’s top war hero could be sidelined, based on jealously by officials in the Ministry of Defense and the military hierarchy, this sent a message to Iraqi youth that no one was safe from the tentacles of the corrupt political elite.  Put differently, the political theater surrounding the sidelining of a true Iraqi patriot, one who declared that he had “zero tolerance” for sectarianism in the CTS, was the last straw.
A long period from 2003 to 2019 finally erupted in a massive outburst of demonstrations which have progressing attracted other parts of Iraqi society. While this impressive demonstration of peaceful but determined collective action was gathering strength, in a remote area of idlib Province in north west Syria, the self-styled “Caliph Ibrahim” was meeting his fate.


[1] In Arabic, al-fitna connotes much more intense conflict than the English word “discord.” It implies discord and chaos which pose a major threat to a society’s stability and ability to sustain itself
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Aqeel Abboud - The Demonstrations in Iraq: Why is sectarianism finished?مظاهرات العراق: لماذا الطائفية ليست عاملاً؟-عقيل عبود

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منذ 25 أكتوبر ، والشباب العراقيون في بغداد ومدن أخرى في الجزء الوسط والجنوبي من العراق ما زالوا

يحتجون ضد ما رأوا أنه أسوأ حكومة تخيلوها. يسيطر الشباب النشطون والمتحمسون على المشاهد في مدن مختلفة.

الطلبات مرتفعة للغاية ، والانضباط في مخاطبة هذه المطالب لافت للنظر على الرغم من محاولة الحكومة لتفريق المحتجين باستخدام القوة المفرطة. الخسائر بين المحتجين في تزايد لكنها لم تردع المتظاهرين بالتراجع.
       
ومن اللافت للنظر أيضًا أن المحتجين لم يلتزموا بالطريقة السياسية الكلاسيكية للاحتجاج ، مثل السير في اتجاه بعض المناصب العامة في المنطقة الخضراء حيث توجد معظم المكاتب الحكومية والسفارات الأجنبية لكنهم قرروا هذه المرة استخدام ساحة التحرير ، في بغداد وفي وسط المدن الأخرى ، على الرغم من إشعال النار في بعض المكاتب العامة في مدن مختلفة ، على الرغم من إدانة غالبية المتظاهرين لتلك الحوادث.
        في بلد دمرته الحرب الأهلية ، وأعمال الإرهاب ، والنظام السياسي الطائفي المتغير ، والحكم السيئ ، تضرر النسيج الاجتماعي العراقي بشدة.

في يونيو من عام 2014 ، كاد العراقيون يدفعون الثمن الأكبر ، عندما تم إهانة السيادة العراقية من قبل جماعة إرهابية تسمى داعش أو الدولة الأسلامية في العراق والشام. خضعت لهذه المجموعة ثلاث مدن رئيسية ، وكان ملايين الأشخاص تحت سيطرة هذه المجموعة الإرهابية ، وارتكبت أعمال وحشية ضد الأقليات مثل المسيحيين والإيزيديين. استغرق الأمر ما يقرب من ثلاث سنوات وآلاف من أرواح الشباب العراقي لتحرير تلك المدن وطرد الجماعة الإرهابية من الأراضي العراقية.
        
مع عدم وجود علامات على وجود إصلاحات سياسية واقتصادية وفساد مرتفع قدر الإمكان ، قلب الشباب العراقي أصواتهم وشكواهم نحو الحكومة التي يقودها الشيعة. وهذه المرة الأصوات قوية وواضحة ، أن شي جذري يجب القيام به. لم يعد الأمر يتعلق بالطوائف ، أو الأحزاب ، أو الأعراق التي كانت مهيمنة على الأجواء السياسية قبل 10/25 ، بل هو من أجل بلد يشعر العراقيون الشباب بحقهم في القتال من أجله والدفاع عنه والفخر به..
      
جسد الشباب العراقي الناشئ وعيًا وطنيًا رائعًا تجاوز كل الأسماء الأخرى. لقد طور الشباب العراقي مفهومًا رائعًا للوطنية في فترة قصيرة من الزمن؟ لماذا هذا؟ لماذا فشلت الأيديولوجيات السياسية الدينية في تطوير مفهوم بسيط للوطنية بين الشباب العراقي؟ من المؤكد أن الأمر يتعلق بفشل هذه الأيديولوجيات في تحفيز الشباب على قبول أفكار جديدة ، ومفاهيم جديدة للحياة هم نفسهم لا يؤمنون بها.
   
      لقد مضى الوقت على الأيديولوجيات السياسية والدينية في العراق وبالتأكيد كانت سبب الكثير من
الدمار الذي حدث منذ منتصف سبعينيات القرن الماضي. على مدار سنوات ، عكفت هذه الأيديولوجيات السياسية والدينية على قلب وعقل الشباب ، وكانت النتائج كارثية. لقد أستبدلت هذه الأيديولوجيات الوطنية بالكراهية ، والشعور بقبول الآخرين ورفضهم على أساس معتقداتهم السياسية أو الدينية. خلقت هذه الأيديولوجيات طبقات سياسية واجتماعية واقتصادية تشعر بأن هناك نوعًا من التمكين الذي يمنحها الحق في التفكير عن الآخرين واتخاذ القرارات نيابة عنهم.


        لم تعد الأجيال الجديدة تلجأ إلى هذه الأيديولوجيات ، ولا تعتمد على الطبقات الممكّنة التي أوجدتها للتفكير عنها أو لاتخاذ القرارات بالنيابة عنها. إنهم أفراد متعلمون مسؤولون واثقون معتمدون على موجة جديدة من التقنيات ووسائل التواصل الاجتماعي الفعالة جدًا للاتصال ببعضهم البعض وللتعلم من تجاربهم الأخرى. لا تؤيد الأجيال الجديدة الانتماء السياسي أو الديني. إنهم يريدون أن يكونوا أحرارا ونشطين اجتماعيا ومستقلين ماليا. الأيديولوجيات السياسية والدينية لا تمنحهم الوقت والفضاء للتفكير بعقلانية حول العديد من القضايا الأساسية بالنسبة لهم.

      الوطنية هي شعور بالإيمان ، وإحساس بالفهم ، وإحساس بالوعي لجميع العناصر التي تربط الفرد بمجتمعه / مجتمعها بغض النظر عن الحزبية أو العرقيه. ولكن من الصعب حقًا التوصل إلى هذه المشاعر ، لا سيما لمجتمع عصفت به الحزبية والانقسام العرقي. الشباب العراقي فعل ذلك! لكن المدهش أن بالنسبة لهم ، كل رأي ، كل فكرة ، كل مفهوم له تاريخ انتهاء صلاحيه ، وبالتأكيد الأيديولوجيات السياسية والدينية في انهيار تام ، وهي بلا شك عفا عليها الزمن من قبل بعض الأفكار البسيطة الأسرع نموا والتي تكشف بساطة الحياة البشرية و طموحها للتغيير ، التغيير الاجتماعي ، التغيير الاقتصادي ، والتغيير السياسي.
     يجب على الحكومة العراقية الاهتمام بما يجري في بغداد والمدن الأخرى قبل فوات الأوان. فعل شيء الآن أفضل من عدم القيام بأي شيء.
 
الأعتماد على صبر الشباب القصيرهو خطأ مميت. الاستماع إلى الأجيال الجديدة أمر ضروري لعملية بناء عراق جديد سواء أحببنا ذلك أم لا. لدى الأجيال الجديدة رؤى ولديها إمكانيات ولديها الجرأة لتتجاوز ما تلتزم به المؤسسة السياسية والطبقة الحاكمة. تشكك الأجيال الجديدة في شرعية كل خط أحمر تنشئها المؤسسة السياسية والدينية للحفاظ على الوضع الراهن ، الذي يعيق عملية التطور بمعناها السياسي والاجتماعي والاقتصادي في نهاية المطاف.

      إنها حقبة جديدة في العراق وبأجيال جديدة لديها الكثير لتقدمه. يتعين على القادة السياسيين والدينيين 
الاستماع إلى مطالبهم والمساعدة في جعل ما يقدمونه للمجتمع حقيقة واقعة
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يشرفنا أن يكون الأستاذ عقيل عبود مؤلفًا مساهمًا في مدونة "الشرق الأوسط الجديد"

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!يسألونك عن الوطنية I want to ask you about patriotism!

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ينشر هذا المقال من قبل جعفر جعفر ، وهو محلل ثقافي وناشط من بغدادأصلاً أصلاً 

ليس الشعور بالوطنية كلمات يرددها الواهمون على انهم وطنيون او لانهم عملوا على التنديد او الهتاف بسقوط الحاكم المستبد من خارج الحدود  ، او ضرب دائرة حكومية ، او تفجير مؤسسة يكون  المستفيد الاول منها هو الشعب وفي اخر المطاف  يأتوا ليقبضوا ثمنها كخدمة جهادية. لا اعتقد هذا ولا ذاك. 


برأيي ان الشعور بالوطنية أعمق من هذا. عندما تضع رأسك على الوسادة ليلا وتستعيد شريط احداث اليوم وتبدأ بمحاكات نفسك وتسألها لماذا صغارنا يفترشون الارض في صفوف المدارس التي لم يبقى منها غير الاسم ...شبابيكها مهشمة تتحرك كلما لامستها رياح الشتاء الباردة ؛ صفوفها  متخمة بأعداد الطلاب الذي تجاوز كل الحدود المسموح وغير المسموح بها في أنظمة التعليم في كل أنحاء العالم بحيث لم يترك مجالا للمدرس لكي يمارس حقه الطبيعي داخل الصف وهو الوصول الى السبورة لشرح الدرس ...

ولماذا لا نستطيع ان نفعل شئ ازاء كل الذي يحدث؟! او ترى الصغار يتزاحمون على تقاطعات الشوارع يتسولون راكبي السيارات من اجل الحصول عل لقمة العيش في اخر النهار.

الشعور بالوطنية عندما تسمع انفجار ارهابي استهدف مواطنين ابرياء يعتصرك الألم وتهرب منك الكلمات وتقفز أمامك صور اشلاء الأطفال والنساء التي تناثرت على امتداد البصر او عندما يجهز  الإرهابيون  على ارثك الحضاري يحطمونه بمعاولهم الغبية يعتصر قلبك الألم وتدمع عيناك.  

الشعور بالوطنية هي ان  يتقوس ضلعك وشخصيتك تنهار وانت تشاهد المرضى يفترشون الارض بسبب قلة الاسرة وشحة  الدواء في بلد تختزن ارضه ثروات لا حصر لها ولا عد لكنها أصبحت نهبا للسراق بينما الفقراء ليس لهم سوى فتات موائد الكبار. 

الوطنية هي ان يوخزك ضميرك عندما ترى أسواق البلاد تغص بمنتجات مصانع البلدان الاخرى بينما معامل ومصانع البلاد معطلة بفعل فاعل. 
الشعور بالوطنية هي ان  يعتصرك  الألم وتعتريك الحسرة عندما تنظر الى وجوه الشباب في الدول الأقل ثراءا من بلدك وهي تنبض بالحياة وترتسم على وجهوهم البهجة والسعادة والأمل اما شباب بلادك  تراه محبطا منكسرا دائم البحث عن سراب أمل في ركام الحياة المعطلة. 

الشعور بالوطنية هي شعورك بالحسرة عندما تخرج في الصباح الباكر الى العمل وانت في بلاد الغربة  وتلاحظ العمال منهمكين في احد مواقع العمل اما لتوسيع طريق عام او تشييد  مستشفى جديد او مجمع سكني او تجديد لشبكة مياه او غيره وتستحضر في نفس الوقت صورة الحياة المعطلة  في بلادك الا من ضجيج السيارات التي تختنق بها الشوارع.  

الشعور بالوطنية عندما تخنقك العبرة ويعتصرك الألم وانت ترى الفقراء يبحثون عن قوت يومهم  في المزابل!

الشعور بالوطنية هي ان تنزعج عندما ترى امنيات ومطالب شعبك ماهي الا حقوق أساسية تتمتع بها حتى الشعوب الفقيرة منذ زمن طويل.

الشعور بالوطنية ان يعتصرك الألم عندما ترى الكثير من  الجهلة والسراق  قد تسيدت وأصبحت تحتكم على مقدرات الشعب اما اعزة الناس فأصبحت منسية جل ما تتمناه البقاء على قيد الحياة  حتى وان كانت تعيش على هامشها!

الشعور بالوطنية ان تنتابك الحسرة والألم عندما ترى السياسيين وقادة البلاد  يعمرون الارض ويبنون القصور لأنفسهم وحاشيتهم بينما يترك الوطن خربة مهملة  ليس للمواطن فيها سوى العشوائيات. 

الشعور بالوطنية ان يمتلأ صدرك بالغيظ عندما ترى سراق المال العام الذين يشهد العالم على تورطهم بنهب أموال الشعب يستقبلون احسن استقبال في دواوين  الحكومة.   
الشعور بالوطنية .....

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Aqeel Abboud - What will happen after 'Abd al-Mahdi's resignation?عقيل عبود - ماذا بعد استقالة عبد المهدي؟

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في رسالة لمجلس النواب العراقي ، رئيس مجلس الوزراء عادل عبد المهدي يعلن عن أستقالته معزياً هذا القرار على أنه محاولة لحقن الدم العراقي ، وتجنيب البلاد المزيد من الفوضى والعنف. 

القرار جاء متأخراً جداً من الرجل ، والدماء سالت وشباب فقدوا حياتهم في رحلة التأكيد على مسؤولياتهم الكبيرة في الحفاظ على العراق كوحدة واحدة وفِي محاولة أعادة بناء هذا الوطن والذي عملت كل الكتل السياسية بمختلف مسمياتها وتوجهاتها على تفكيكه وتدميره

القرار جاء متأخراً جداً من الرجل ، والدماء سالت وشباب فقدوا حياتهم في رحلة التأكيد على مسؤولياتهم الكبيرة في الحفاظ على العراق كوحدة واحدة وفِي محاولة أعادة بناء هذا الوطن والذي عملت كل الكتل السياسية بمختلفمسمياتها 
وتوجهاتها على تفكيكه وتدميره.

لم تكن أستقالة الرجل منةٌ منه ، فهو أي عبد المهدي أعتاد على أن يقول أن
 أستقالتي في جيبي دلالة على أنه لا يكترث بأي منصب سياسي مهما كبر ، لكن أستقالته جاءت نتيجة الضغط الكبير والمستمر وعلى مدى شهرين أعطى فيها الشباب العراقي أنموذجاً يحتذى به من الانضباط والتمسك بأهدافه الرفيعة والمتعالية بسلمية تظاهراته وعفويتها رغم محاولات السلطة البائسة في ألصاق ابشع التهم للتقليل من شأن هذه التظاهرات ومحاولة ربطها بأجندات خارجية

 وحتى داخلية ، ومن خلال أستخدام العنف اللا مبرر للقضاء على هذه
 التظاهرات بعد أن عجزت السلطة أعلامياً من سلب مشروعية أهدافه.
لقد تجاهلت السلطة الحاكمة في العراق كل النداءات التي اطلقها الشباب العراقي بأحقية وجدية طلباتهم التي تتعلق بلزومية أحداث تغييرات جادة في مرافق الحياة كافة ، في التركيبة السياسية ، وفِي البناء الاقتصادي ، وفِي عملية التحول الاجتماعي المطلوبة لإحداث حالة وطنية جامعة تختفي عندها كل المسميات الطائفية المقيتة التي اعتاشت عليها سلطة الأحزاب المتنفذة بعد سقوط الطاغية وليومنا هذا.

لم تدرك السلطة الحاكمة كعادتها ، أنها أمام جيل يدرك ما يريد ومستعد أن يمضي في طريق الوصول الى أهدافه مهما كان الثمن ، فهو جيل محروم ، جيلٌ عطش للحرية وللعمل وللإبداع والمشاركة الجادة في عملية صنع القرار ، وهو جيل لا يملك أي شيء ليخسره أذا ما انتفض ، وهذا الجيل خطر جداً في المجتمع ، وكما وصفه الكاتب الأمريكي "جيمس بالديوين"، "أن جيلاً لا يملك شيئاً يخسره هو أخطر شيء في المجتمع".

بالتأكيد هذا الوصف من قبل بالديوين يحتمل وصفاً سلبياً حدده واقع الكاتب الأمريكي ذو الأصول الأفريقية والذي عاش في فترة متأزمة معبئة بالقهر والفقر والحرمان والعنصرية التي كان يمارسها الرجل الأبيض ضد أناس لا يرى فيهم نوع من حياة تحترم ، لكن في العراق الحال مختلف ، فهذا الشباب المحروم يستمد من حرمانه كل أدوات ابداعه ورغبته في أحداث تغيير جدي وجذري في المجتمع العراقي.

هناك رغبة جامحة يمتاز بها الجيل الجديد في العراق ، تدفعه نحو الانفصال الكامل عن واقع مؤلم افرزته سياسات الحكومات المتعاقبة على حكم العراق بعد سقوط الطاغية ، وركزت هذا الواقع المؤلم سلوكيات سلبية لأجيال سابقة لهذا الجيل الجديد ، والتي لم تأخذ على عاتقها مسؤولية أحداث التغيير في واقعها المزري وهي بالتأكيد معذورة في ذلك ، لعمق الجرح الذي أصاب كرامتها في الصميم بعد أن رضخت واستسلمت لسادية نظام شوفيني عنصري تمثل في نظام حزب البعث ، وتصلبت في روحها وأفكارها عندما أمنت بقدسية لصوص وخطوط حمر.

هذا الجيل الجديد ، غسل عارنا جميعاً فأستحق عن جدارة أن يرفع هو وحده لا غيره شعار الامام الثائر الحسين ابن علي عليهما السلام "هيهات منا الذلة". الان نعود الى سؤالنا ماذا بعد أستقالة عبد المهدي؟ هي أول الغيث من دون شك ، وهي بداية أنهيار نظاماً محاصصاتي فاسد أوجدته قوة الاحتلال الأمريكي ودعمته قوى أقليميةً وأخرى محليةً تحت ذريعة وجوبية مشاركة الجميع في نظام ديمقراطي توافقي يحفظ للجميع حقوقهم وخياراتهم ، وتناسوا أن هذا النظام فاسد من حيث المبدأ ومن حيث التطبيق ، والحالة

اللبنانية ماثلة أمامنا بكل تجلياتها المرعبة. وهي أي الاستقالة بداية لبناء نظامٍ سياسي جديد تفرضه قوانين واضحة بمعاييرها الانتخابية والوطنية والمهنية ، والتي ستكون عاملاً أساسياً في التأسيس لدولة المواطنة التي تحترم فيها رغبات الأقليات وتحترم أيضاً رغبات الأغلبية السياسية والتي تفرزها صناديق الاقتراع.

هي أيضاً ستكون بداية لنهاية الفساد الذي استشرى في كل مفاصل الحياة في
 العراق ، في كل المؤسسات حتى القضائية منها.

ما يتبع هذه الخطوة يجب أن يكون على مستوى تضحيات الشباب العراقي ، فمحاولة القوى أو الكتل الفاسدة بأيجاد البديل لعادل عبد المهدي سوف لن تنتهي ، لان هذه الكتل تعيش حالة انفصام لا مثيل لها ، فهي لا زالت تشعر أنها يجب أن تكون جزء من الحل وأنها أخلاقياً مؤهلة لذلك ، وهذا لعمري هو الخسران المبين.

فكيف لمن يكون هو أساس المرض أن يعطي العلاج لهذا المرض؟ أشكالية أخلاقية تعيشها هذه الكتل الفاسدة ، بالإضافة الى أشكالاتها الفكرية والبنيوية والتي لم تعمل هذه الكتل على إعادة زيارتها من جديد وأحداث ماهو مطلوب منها للتغيير.

بالتأكيد ، الشارع العراقي يمتلك البديل المستقل والمهني والنزيه وهناك أسماء كثيرة لقيادة مرحلة انتقالية يتم خلالها أحداث تغيرات في قوانين الانتخاب وإعادة النظر في بعض فقرات الدستور المخيفة والتي تنطوي تطبيقاتها على مخاطر تمس وجود العراق برمته ، وأنا هنا لست بصدد عرض أسماء معينة بذاتها وأن أمتلكت الحق في ذلك كباحث سياسي مستقل ، لكن الامر يترك للشباب العراقي وللناخب العراقي لكي يختار من يراه مناسباً وهو قادر على ذلك.

بالتأكيد ، مخاضات الديمقراطية في مجتمعات عانت كثيراً تحت سطوة حكومات شمولية متجبرة ، مخاضات عسيرة ومؤلمة ومكلفة ، لكن نهاياتها رائعة. وتجربة العراقيين مع النظام الديمقراطي الذي يرغب به الشباب العراقي والجيل الجديد تجربة مريرة ، لكنها تحسب للعراقيين بكل أخطائها وسلبياتها ، فالديمقراطية نظام متماسك متشابك في مسيرته التاريخية التي لا تنفصم حلقات سلسلتها.

فالنظام الديمقراطي المحترم هو وسيلة تقود الى غاية مفادها نقل الانسان من التوحش الى التمدن ، كما هو حالة الوطن الذي ينقل الانسان من التوحش الى التمدن حسب تعبير المفكر نصيف نصار ، وأن ما جرى منذ ١٦ سنة في العراق هو ماضي كلنا شاركنا في حركته وفساد أحداثه ، وأن صراعات هذا الماضي يجب أن تكون خلفنا ، ليست أمامنا أو الى جانبنا على حد قول المفكر المغربي محمد عابد الجابري.

الجيل العراقي الجديد الخارج من تحت رماد فساد أحزاب الإسلام السياسي والأحزاب العلمانية والتي وضعت جانباً كل قيمها ومبادئها من أجل الحصول على مكاسب مادية لا قيمة لها ، هذا الجيل عازم على أحداث ثورة كبيرة تكون نتيجتها الحتمية هي وطن يتسع للجميع.

يشرفنا أن يكون الأستاذ عقيل عبود مؤلفًا مساهمًا في مدونة "الشرق الأوسط الجديد"

The October Revolution (Thawrat Tishreen): Why, When and What will it Accomplish in the Future?

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The “October Revolution” began this past October 1st No one expected it to have achieved the impact it has had to date.  The uprising, known in Arabic as “Thawrat Tishreen,” largely involves youth from the southern cities and towns of Iraq.  Why did the uprising begin this past October, what has it achieved to date, and what can we expect it to be its impact on Iraq in the future?

No one expected that peaceful demonstrations could bring about political change in Iraq. However, Iraqi youth have already had a significant impact on Iraq’s political system. First, the uprising, which has attracted thousands of demonstrators, primarily youth, led to the resignation of Prime Minister Adil ‘Abd al-Mahdi on November 30, 2019, 2 months after the uprising began.  Second, the political message of the uprising has garnered widespread support from many sectors of Iraqi society, not just youth. 

A third accomplishment is that the uprising has shown the fallacy of the traditional Western analysis of Iraqi society as one rent by sectarian and ethnic cleavages. This narrow framing of Iraqi politics and society, which smacks of Orientalism, tells us little or nothing about the current uprising. The fact that the youth demonstrators are overwhelmingly Shica, who are calling for an end to sectarianism while being attacked by a Shica dominated political class, has laid the unholy Trifecta of Shica, Sunni and Kurd to rest. 

Finally, the uprising has achieved the result of challenging the political power Iran exercises in Iraq and guarantees that Iraqi politics won’t be able to return to the status quo ante.  One of the main slogans of the October Revolution is “Iran Out of Iraq” (Irhal Iran) and "We want a Country" (Nutlub Watan). In short, the October Revolution has significantly challenged the sectarian and pro-Iranian dynamic of the Green Zone political class which has ruled Iraq since the fall of Saddam Husayn’s regime in 2003. The days in which this elite rules with impunity are over.
Tragically, the uprising has cost Iraq the blood of its precious youth. To date, over 500 demonstrators have been killed and 25,000 injured. The violence has underscored the extent to which so-called “Popular Mobilization Units,” or al-Hashad al-Shacbi, constitute the real “power behind the throne” in Iraq politics.  

Not only have Iranian-funded militias been at the center of efforts to repress the uprising, but the de-facto leader of Iraq, General Qasim Suleimani, the head of Iran’s Quds Force and Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), has been actively involved in directing Prime Minister cAbd al-Mahdi’s replacement.

This political influence has been evident in the attacks by Iranian-funded militias, especially the Asa’ib Ahl al-Haqq, led by ex-Mahdi Army member, Qais al-Khazzali, which has killed and abducted prominent activists in the central districts of Baghdad, and cities and towns of the south.  Many of the activists who were seized and subsequently released report having been beaten and tortured. The whereabouts of many other activists and protestors is still unknown.
At first, the main attacks on the peaceful youth protestors were carried out by the Rapid Protection Forces of the Ministry of Interior. Many members of these forces, referred to as al-damaj by Iraqis, were recruited from the PMUs, or forced on the ministry by the militias. These ill-trained forces are hostile to the youth demonstrators and caused countless unnecessary deaths, some caused by their lack of military training. Many youth died from heavy military grade tear gas canisters being fired at their heads which caused painful deaths.

Despite the violence directed at the Iraqi youth protestors, none have resorted to the use of weapons or bombs against government security forces or the Iranian backed militias. The demonstrations thus reflect great political maturity on the part of the protestors. The youth who are spearheading the October Revolution have refused to be drawn into violent responses to the early attacks by the Rapid Response Forces and, subsequently, the much more brutal attacks by PMUs, especially the so-called League of the Righteous People (Asa’ib Ahl al-Haqq).

What are the main drivers behind the uprising?  The main underlying causes of discontent among the Iraqi population at large is the extensive corruption which characterizes the cliques which control the political system, the absence of social services and the lack of jobs. After 16 years of so-called democratic governance, combined with no improvement in the standard of living for the vast majority of Iraqis have become thoroughly disillusioned with the country’s political system.

The populace’s frustration was especially strained by the firing of Lt. General cAbd al-Wahhab al-Sacdi, the commandeer of Iraq’s Counter-Terrorism Services (CTS)which defeated the Dacish terrorists in Mosul and north-central Iraq, on September 29, 2019. A popular folk-hero who statement that he had “zero-tolerance” for sectarianism among his troops resonated with Iraqis who have had enough of corruption and ongoing theft of the nation’s privy purse. 

The firing of CTS commander al-Sacdi, whose popularity was resented in the Ministry of Defense, was also promoted by Iran who was suspicious of his ties to US forces in Iraq who has trained the CTS after the collapse of the Iraqi Army in Mosul and north-central Iraq in June 2014.  Dismissing al-Sacdi, who was considered one of the few patriots in the Iraqi military who wasn’t beholden to Iran, served as a key “tipping point” which ultimately led youth to flood the streets of Iraqi cities demanding a complete restructuring of the Iraqi political system.

Thus what began as a demand for an end to corruption, the improvement of social services, and the provision of jobs for the large number of unemployed Iraqis, especially youth, quickly was transformed into a call for the resignation of the Iraqi cabinet and parliament and its replacement by a new political system.  

Although the details of what Iraqi youth demonstrators wanted to establish in place of the so-called “quota system” (nizam al-muhassasat) were no always clear, soon calls began to appear for a presidential based system – with the elimination of the prime minster – and the election of parliament members in single member electoral districts, instead of elections conducted via “party lists.”

As all Iraqis know, after five national parliamentary elections since 2003 (2 in 2005 and 1 each in 2010, 2014 and 2018), the elections were at their core, an exercise in political cliques gaining enough votes to obtain control of lucrative ministries, such as health and defense, and the Ministry of Interior, to be able to gain access to public funds to engage in corrupt financial transactions, and to award members of the political class large salaries, pensions and entitlements, such as houses, automobiles and publicly funded aides.

If the first phase of the October Revolution was demanding an improvement in Iraqis’ standard of living, and the second the demand for a new political system the third involved calls for an ending of Iran’s ever increasing control of the Iraqi state and the national economy.  

It was this last phase of the uprising which most disturbed the PMUs which are funded by Iran. If the October Revolution led to a diminution of Iran’s influence in Iraq, a widely held desire supported by the overwhelming majority of Iraqis, then the PMUs financial assets would be adversely affected.  This explains the viciousness of its attacks on youth protestors, the kidnapping of activists and the circulation of lists of activists as desirable targets.

Iran is hurting economically due to the sanctions imposed on it by the Trump administration. These sanctions have made it ever more difficult for the Tehran regime to continue funding social services in Iran while supporting a wide range of military groups in Iraq, the al-sad regime, and Hizballah in Lebanon.  For Iran, Iraq is a vital resource because it provides needed goods and a market for Iranian products and a means to circumvent, at least in part, US sanctions. 

Thus, the October revolution, should it be successful, will pose serious negative implications for Iran and its use of Iraq as a bridge to Syria and Lebanon.  It will curtail its ability to avoid the most damaging aspects of international sanctions stemming from the Trump administration's desire to renegotiate the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) on Iran's development of nuclear weapons and added European Union sanctions imposed due to Iran's long-range ballistic missile testing.

Iran is hurting economically due to the sanctions imposed on it by the Trump administration. These sanctions have made it ever more difficult for the Tehran regime to continue funding social services in Iran while supporting a wide range of military groups in Iraq, the al-sad regime, and Hizballah in Lebanon.  For Iran, Iraq is a vital resource because it provides needed goods and a market for Iranian products and a means to circumvent, at least in part, US sanctions. Thus, the October revolution, should it be successful, poses serious negative implications for Iran and its use of Iraq as a bridge to Syria and Lebanon.

What will happen next?  First, it is impossible to separate the October Revolution from the ongoing US-Iranian conflict. Clearly, Iran doesn’t want to see the establishment of a truly democratic government in Iraq. Instead, it prefers to use members of its militias as proxies to control the security forces and benefit from corrupt dealings with prominent members of the Iraqi political class.  This policy achieves three goals for Iran.  It allows Iran to maintain its political dominance in Iraq, to use Iraq as a land bridge to  Syria and Lebanon and, finally, as a means to circumvent the sanctions which the US has imposed on it.

Thus the main question is whether, given Iranian control of Iraq – politically, militarily and economically -  the October Revolution can. be successful.  On the surface, success would seem to be a long shot.  How can Iraqi youth confront the increasingly vicious militias which depend for their long term viability on loyalty to the Tehran regime?

If the peaceful youth protestors can sustain their demonstrations, which are having a negative impact on the economy and the investment environment for foreign capital in Iraq, this make cause powerful political figures in Iraq to reconsider their opposition to meeting the demands of the protestors.  The pressure of ongoing demonstrations may at the very least help reign in some of the most egregious corrupt practices and see some improvement in social services.

However, the problem of jobs is a huge challenge which no one in the current Iraqi political class has dared to address.  Indeed, one of the reasons for the PMUs’ success is not that they helped fight the Dacish terrorists, but that they provide jobs for poor Iraqi youth who have few employment options available to them.

Neither the United States nor the European Union, or wealthy oil-producing states such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, realize the powder keg which is brewing in Iraq.  With 70% of Iraqis under the age of 30, statistically, 28 million of Iraq’s population of 40 million are youth.  While thousands of patriotic Iraqi youth are demonstrating to establish a new social democracy which would serve the interests of the Iraqi populace, many others are being lured by the siren songs of the militias and criminal organizations.

القيادة الغائبة والثورة المضادة The Iraqi October Revolution: Absent Leadership and Counterrevolution فارس كمال نظمي Faris Kamal Nadhmi

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 يقول فكتور هوجو: «الثورات ليست إبنة المصادفة بل إبنة الضرورة»Revolutions are not born of  chance but of necessity؛ ؛ لكن هذه "الضرورة"لا تتحول إلى ملموس واقعي مكتمل ومتحقق على الأرض دون إطار سياسي ذي حدٍ أدنى من التنظيم القيادي.

واليوم، وبعد مرور أكثر من شهرين على انطلاق الحراك الثوري العراقي في الأول من تشرين الأول 2019 الساعي إلى إحداث تغيير راديكالي في النظام السياسي، فإنه ما يزال مشتتاً بين تصنيفات متعددة، غير قادرة  -أو غير راغبة- بالتنسيق السياسي المنظم فيما بينها. فكلما يطول أمدُ هذا الحراك دونما مأسسة تنظيمية أو قطافٍ ملموس يتناسب مع حجم الأزمة ومشروعية المطالب وهول الدماء التي سُفكتْ، تصبحُ صناعة الفوضى وشيطنة الاحتجاجات (أي الثورة المضادة) هي الخيار الأسهل والأكثر تفضيلاً لدى "حماة"اللادولة المستترة في أحشاء الدولة العراقية المريضة، بعد أن فشلوا في سياسة القنص لإجهاض الحراك في مراحله الأولى.

الثورة بين النقصان والاكتمال
إن عماد الموجة الثورية الحالية من الاحتجاجات هم الشباب الوطني النقي القادم من أحزمة الفقر حيث العدمية السياسية الشعبوية الرافضة لكل حزبوية أو ايديولوجيا ممنهجة.ولولا هؤلاء لما استمر الزخم الاحتجاجي حتى اليوم.

ثم التحقت بهم فيما بعد أطيافٌ وطنية أخرى: مدنيون ويساريون وشيوعيون وعروبيون وناشطون ونقابات ومنظمات مدنية، إلى جانب أجزاء من طبقة الموظفين، وأعداد مهمة من طلبة المدارس والجامعات، وحرفيين ورجال دين. وهؤلاء جميعاً يمثلون إطاراً واسعاً متعدد الثقافات والايديولوجيات والخلفيات الإثنية، لكنه ينطوي على محرومية أقل وغيظ ثوري أضعف، وعلى خلفية تنظيمية أكبر نوعاً ما، مما هو عليه الأمر لدى الشباب الثوري. لذلك فإنهم يعدّون جمهوراً سانداً فاعلاً وليس صانعاً لجوهر الزخم الاحتجاجي الحالي.
أما الصدريون الذين باتوا يمثلون جزءً مهماً من معتصمي ساحة التحرير تحديداً، فقد توزعوا حسب خلفياتهم الطبقية ونزعتهم الولائية لزعيمهم، إذ انضم بعضهم إلى الشباب الراديكالي المستميت، فيما ظل البعض الآخر أقل استماتة وأكثر انصياعاً للأوامر وانتظاراً لها.

وهكذا تبدو الثورة التي انطلق عمرها المستقبلي للتو تجسيداً لكتلة تاريخية وطنياتية عابرة للطبقية والعقائدية والهويات الفرعية، شديدةَ العنفوان في دمائها وخطابها وغضبها وأهدافها الجذرية وسعة التمثيل التي تمتلكها. كما تتميز بقدرتها على التحشيد العددي الواسع عبر تنسيقياتٍ متفرقة في أرجاء البلاد تعمل على تحديد إحداثيات التظاهر والاعتصام مكانياً وزمانياً، والترويج الإعلامي في مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي، وتوفير الإمدادات الغذائية وتأمين الخدمات الطبية واللوجستية للمحتجين. لكن في الوقت نفسه، تبدو الثورة غير قادرة بعد على إطلاق هيكليتها التنظيمية للتمهيد لإعلان عصرٍ سياسي جديد.

وليس المقصود بالهيكلية التنظيمية ظهور استقطاب حزبوي أو عقائدي تقليدي إذ يبدو هذا أمراً لا يتفق مع التنوع الفكري والثقافي والاجتماعي والنفسي للحراك، فضلاً عن أنه قد يغدو سبباً للانشقاق والتفتت؛ بل يقصد به بروز أطر تنسيقية قيادية بين بؤر الحراك المتنوعة بصيغ إئتلافية أو جبهوية تسمح بتلاقح الرؤى وتوحيد الخطاب بما يبلور قطبية سياسية مرنة للحراك ذات مشروع محدد المعالم بمطالبه وخياراته وقراراته، بمواجهة القطبية القابضة على السلطة.  

وبمنظور مخالف، تقتضي الدقة القول أن بقاء الحراك بلا قيادات أو أطر تنظيمية ينطوي أيضاً على إيجابيات مثلما ينطوي على سلبيات. فواحدة من أهم أسباب قدرته على التعبئة والمناورة والمطاولة هي طابعه الأفقي غير المُمأسس أو غير المقيد، وهذا يجعله محتفظاً بزخمه الثوري العابر للنسبيات المعرقلة، والمقاوم لاحتمالات الاجهاض أو الاختراق. كما إن حراكاً شبابياً تعبوياً بلا قيادة من هذا النوع، قد ينجح في إرساء أسس جديدة لشخصية المواطن الذي يدرك السياسة بوصفها فعلاً اجتماعياً اعتراضياً لأجل تحقيق كرامته الآدمية لا بوصفها وسيلة لحيازة السلطة، ويدرك الدولة بوصفها جهازاً منظماً للحقوق والواجبات لا يتطلب غطاءً ايديولوجياً يضمن هيمنة المالكين على الفاقدين.

إلا أن إيجابية التعبئة الاحتجاجية دون قيادات، لا تغدو حقيقة مجدية وفاعلة ومنتجة إلا إذا استجاب النظام السياسي جزئياً لمطالب الحراك، وبدأ بتقديم تنازلات إجرائية في هيكليته بما يسمح بإعادة تقاسم السلطة تدريجياً مع الفواعل السياسيين الجدد. أما في حال انغلاق النظام السياسي واستعصائه على التفاعل مع الحراك الشعبي المستميت – كما يحدث اليوم في العراق- فإن بقاء هذا الحراك دون أطر تنسيقية قيادية لمدة طويلة، يعني إما خموده بفعل حالة الجمود السياسي العقيمة، أو تشظيه بمرور الوقت إلى جماعات متباينة جداً في رؤاها وخياراتها حد التصادم والتخوين المتبادل ربما، أو تحول عناصره الأكثر راديكالية إلى خيارات العنف المسلح أو التطرف العدمي.

إن واحداً من الأسباب المحتملة لعدم ظهور قيادات متفق عليها لحد الآن في الحراك الحالي هو انتشار نزعة دفاعية في صفوف المحتجين عموماً والشباب خصوصاً، مضمونها أن الحراك ينبغي أن يظل شعبياً صرفاً عصياً على أي تأطير سياسي أو ايديولوجي قد يسعى إلى "ركوب الموجة". هذه النزعة لها ما يبررها نفسياً وأخلاقياً، لكن لا يوجد ما يبررها في عالم الصراع السياسي القائم على احتكار القوة وتنظيمها.

هذه النزعة الدفاعية تنبع من نمط جديد من الثقافة السياسية ذات الطابع الثوري الطهراني، تكونتْ وانتشرتْ بتأثير عاملين: التأثير النفسي لتكنولوجيا التواصل الاجتماعي، ومشاعر الاغتراب السياسي بسبب فشل المشاريع الأيديولوجية التقليدية قاطبة في الشرق الأوسط ومحيطه، وفي العراق تحديداً. ولعلها باتت ظاهرة ذات ملامح عالمية بفعل ثورة الاتصالات، صار يصطلح عليها بظاهرة أو عصر "الثورة بلا قيادات"Leaderless Revolution.

فقد وفر الفضاء الرقمي digitalتحشيداً عولمياً معلوماتياً للأفكار السياسية والقيم العدالوية، عابراً للجنسيات والطبقات وللتنظيم الحزبي التقليدي، إذ يلتقي الملايين سبرانياً في عالم افتراضي يتسع لهم جميعاً، بل يجعلهم جميعاً – في نظر أنفسهم- مهمين وقادة للرأي والتعبير ومنظّرين لطموحات كبيرة، ضمن إطار ايديولوجي غير ممنهج unarticulated ideology. من هنا تطورت "النرجسية الاجتماعية"للفرد (ليست ظاهرة سلبية بالضرورة)، إلى حد النفور من خيار الولاء لقيادات فردية أو لتأطير تنظيمي مُلزِم، واستبداله بخيار الانخراط في قيادة جماعية أفقية لا رؤوس محددة فيها إذ يصبح الجميع قادة ومؤثرين، وفي الوقت نفسه ينفرون من التراتبيات التقليدية التي تمنح البعض هيمنة على البعض الآخر. هذه الهوية الجماعية باتت تشكل بديلاً عن ظهور قيادات فردية يمكن أن تشكّل عاملاً محبطاً أو جارحاً للنرجسية الاجتماعية المتنامية.

وفي الوقت نفسه تفاعلت هذه النزعة المتطيرة من القيود التنظيمية، بمشاعر الاغتراب السياسي العميق الذي يعاني منه الشباب العراقي حيال سلطة الأحزاب الإسلاموية المتهمة بالفساد ونهب المال العام وتدمير الهوية الجامعة وخطف الوطن. فاصبحت مشاعر العجز السياسي وفقدان المعنى السياسي والعزلة السياسية واللامعيارية السياسية، تشكل معالم أساسية في اتجاهاتهم نحوالسلطة. كما أصبحت فكرة "الحزبية"والتنظيم السياسي الممنهج كما لو أنها مرادفة للفساد والخطيئة واللاوطنية، في المخيال السياسي لهؤلاء الشباب ممن لم يجايلوا أي ايديولوجيات أو عصر سياسي سوى حقبة الأسلمة السياسية.

إنهم يريدون أن يبتنوا عقداً اجتماعياً جديداً مع الدولة قائماً على عناصر المواطنة المتساوية والحقوق المدنية الأساسية والضمانات الاجتماعية والهيبة الوطنية وسلطة القانون، دونما توسطات حزبية أو عقائدية. فإعادة بناء الوطنية العراقية بات ينبع من مطالب المواطن الفرد غير المسيس دونما حاجة أن يستعير وطنيته من فكر حزبي أو لاهوت سياسي أو مشروع دولتي مؤدلج. وبتعبير محدد على ألسنتهم: «نريد استرجاع الوطن...نريد إسقاط الأحزاب».


إن الثورة تندلع بوصفها سيكولوجيا كاملة ومكتملة، متشوقة للتغيير الحتمي، وهذا ما حدث في تشرين الأول 2019، لكنها تظل منقوصة ما لم تتحول بمرور الوقت إلى مسك الأرض عبر إطار تنظيمي – ولو مؤقت- يضمن لها قدرة المناورة واتخاذ القرار لكي تشكّل بديلاً مجسماً أمام الأبصار، لا فكرة صادمة أو ضرورة "مؤجلة"فحسب.

من استرجاع حقوق إلى فرض حقوق جديدة
خلال شهرين كاملين، تمركزت مطالب المنتفضين، بما رافقها من سفكٍ غزير لدمائهم، حول عقدة رئيسة وهي استقالة رئيس مجلس الوزراء، لفتح الطريق نحو التغيير السياسي الجذري.
وقد تحقق ذلك في 29 تشرين الثاني حينما قدم استقالته المخجلة بطابعها "الطهراني"و"الفدائي"والاستعلائي، لينفتح الأفق نحو مسارات سياسية جديدة باحتمالاتها العسيرة والمتشعبة.

وهنا يُفترض أن يكفّ الفعل الاحتجاجي عن كونه فعل مطالبة بإقالة أو استبعاد جزء من السلطة فحسب، ليمتد ويتمدد إلى كونه فعل اختيار لنمطٍ بديل من السلطة أيضاً. فالاحتجاج – بوصفه فعلاً تاريخياً- ليس مطالبة بحقوق مستلبة فحسب، بل فرض حقوق جديدة أيضاً ضمن السياقات السلمية ذات الشرعية السياسية الصادرة عن مصدر السلطات، أي الناس (الشعب) بوصفهم عقلاً جماعياً يسمو فوق "شرعيات"دستورية تحاصصية أصبحت جزءً من الماضي في المخيال السياسي للمجتمع.

منذ الآن سيبدأ صراع مرير بين مناورات المنظومة السلطوية الحالية لتفعيل دور البرلمان المعطل في إعادة استيلاد السلطة التنفيذية من بيضة التحاصص الزبائني الإثنوسياسي ذاته، وبين عنفوان الحراك الاحتجاجي للتفتيش عن خيارات سياسية تحقق خروجاً حقيقياً – ولو أولياً- من تلك البيضة الفاسدة المستهلكة.

هذه المواجهة النفسية بين الطرفين تقتضي من كل منهما أن يمارس ما في جعبته من أساليب الضغط والتأثير والإملاء. إلا أنهما سيفترقان في مضامين هذه الأساليب، إذ ستنحو السلطة نحو المماطلة والخداع والقمع، فيما سينحو الثوار نحو المطاولة والعناد والصبر والثبات على إنجاز الانتقال السياسي الجذري.

ولكي تجد نوايا المحتجين طريقها إلى الواقع، وينتقل فعلهم الاحتجاجي إلى فرض الخيارات، فلا بد أن يجري التوافق العام بين فئاتهم الميدانية –ذات الرؤى المتباينة- لإنضاج ستراتيجية ابتدائية موحدة تتحدد فيها الخطوات الإجرائية الواقعية لإنجاز التغيير السياسي، بما يشكّل خياراً شعبياً ملموساً ومجسداً يمكن الدفاع عنه سيكولوجياً ضد مشروع السلطة الذاهب إلى التسويف والتدليس.


ودون هذا الخطوة، وفي ضوء استمرار منهج السلطة في القمع والانتهاكات، ومحاولاتها لاحتواء الحراك الاحتجاجي عبر سياسة شراء الوقت، وعدم وجود إطار تنظيمي قيادي للاحتجاجات، مع التأثير النفسي السلبي الذي قد يتركه عامل الانتظار والملل لدى المحتجين، وغياب الإسناد المعنوي الدولي الكافي لهم، فسيتحول الفراغ السياسي المحدود حالياً إلى فجوة عبثية عميقة تختلط فيها المطالب والمسميات والحقوق حد الالتباس، بما يسهم في إطلاق ديناميات الثورة المضادة، ويمنح الفساد السياسي عمراً إضافياً لأمد غير محدود.


شيطنةالاحتجاجات
إن عدم ظهور الهيكلية التنظيمية المنتظرة للمحتجين لحد الآن، في وقت تتدهور فيه الهيمنة الثقافية للسلطة، ويزداد افتقادها لأي شرعية سياسية أو غطاء أيديولوجي أو كارزما إقناعية بالحد الأدنى، سيدفعها لتبني ستراتيجية الشيطنة والتخوين حيال المحتجين، إلى جانب ستراتيجية القمع المتبناة فعلاً.

وهذا ما حدث بالفعل في بغداد وعدة محافظات خلال الأسابيع الماضية، على يد "بلطجية"السلطة، عبر تفعيلهم لسياسة حرق الأبنية واتهام المحتجين بذلك، لتشويه العنفوان الأخلاقي للثوار السلميين المستميتين لاستعادة الوطن. وهذا لا يعني أن الحراك الاحتجاجي معصوم من العنف أو الانفلاتات الانفعالية، إلا أنه يجدر التمييز مفاهيمياً بين تجريم الاحتجاجات وتخوينها قصدياً وبين نقد بعض ممارساتها وتصويبها.

كما شرعت الأحزاب والجماعات الإسلاموية المتضررة من الثورة بتنظيم تظاهرات مضادة ذات طابع ديني ولائي هدفها المعلن "طرد المندسين والمخربين"في صفوف المحتجين من أجل "المحافظة"على سلمية التظاهرات. وقد رافقت هذه التظاهرات صدامات محدودة وحالات طعن بالسكاكين ضد المعتصمين. كما جرى الإيعاز لعصاباتٍ إجرامية محدودة العدد لتتمركز في أطراف ساحة التحرير ببغداد وتتصرف بطريقة منفلتة، في محاولة لخلط الأوراق وإلصاق تهمة العنفية بالمحتجين.

ووصل الأمر في ليلة 6 كانون الأول/ ديسمبر الماضي إلى اقتحام ميليشيات مسلحة بسيارات مدنية لساحتي الوثبة والخلاني القريبتين من ساحة التحرير، وقيامهم بفتح النار عشوائياً من أسلحة خفيفة ومتوسطة على مئات الشباب السلميين المعتصمين في الساحتين، على مرأى ومسمع القوات الأمنية الرسمية التي انسحبت من محيط المجزرة. فسقط عشرات القتلى والجرحى من المعتصمين، وأحرقت خيامهم، في محاولة لفض الاعتصام وإخلاء الساحات باستخدام ستراتيجية الترويع هذه. إلا أن ثبات المعتصمين وإعادة تجميع صفوفهم بإسناد من معتصمي ساحة التحرير وعناصر "سرايا القبعات الزرق"الصدرية، ووصول أعداد كبيرة من أهالي شرق بغداد لدعمهم، أدى إلى احتواء الموقف وإعادة هيمنة المعتصمين على الفضاء الاحتجاجي.

ولم يقتصر الأمر على هذه الستراتيجيات السلطوية الشائعة عالمياً في لحظات الانتقال السياسي الدراماتيكي، بل تزامنَ ذلك كله مع توجهاتٌ عدوانية متثاقفة لدى حاشية السلطة أيضاً -ممن يرضعون من ثديها الفاسد دون أن يكون لهم دور سياسي أو أمني مباشر- للتنمّرعلى المحتجين وشيطنتهم، لفظياً أو كتابياً، أو عبر الترويج المضلل في وسائل التواصل الاجتماعي لفديواتٍ أو صور في غير سياقها. هذا الاستئساد المتذاكي يراد منه شرعنة ضمنية للسلطة إذ لسان حالهم يتحدث بثنائية حدية ساذجة: «علينا أن نختار بين نظام فاسد فيه قدرٌ من الاستقرار وبين فوضى عنفية مجهولة النهايات».

الاستثمار في مشاعر الذنب الجمعي
في مثال صارخ عن ستراتيجية شيطنة المحتجين، اندلعت في 12 كانون الأول/ ديسمبر مواجهة غامضة في ساحة الوثبة في بغداد بين معتصمين وأحد الشبان الساكنين في المنطقة، انتهت بتدخل قوات مكافحة الشغب التي قتلت الشاب المسلّح ثم سلّمت جثته -بصورة غير مفهومة-  إلى بعض المعتصمين الذين قاموا بسحلها وتعليقها على أعمدة الإشارة الضوئية. وقد استفادت قوى الثورة المضادة من هذه الحادثة العنفية الغامضة في دوافعها وفاعليها الحقيقيين، لتأليب الرأي العام على مجمل الحراك الاحتجاجي وتأثيمه وشيطنته بآليات التعميم والتشويه والتخوين، عبر إلصاق وصمة الغوغائية الكلية به.

وإذا كانت هذه الجريمة الوحشية والمأساوية بكل المعايير، مُدانة بوصفها غوغائية جمعية منفلتة شاركت بها عدة أطراف حكومية وشعبية، فإنها كشفت عن أسلوب التلقي النفسي الذي يمارسه البعض – عن قصد ذاتي أو تحريض خارجي أو غير قصد- في إدراكهم وتقويمهم لهذا النوع من الحوادث العنفية وسط حراك ثوري سلمي في أغلبيته الساحقة.

فمئات الفديوات والصور البشعة عن تفجير رؤوس مئات المتظاهرين منذ بداية الحراك في 1 تشرين الأول لم تحقق صدمة نفسية أو استنكاراً شديداً لدى هؤلاء "البعض"بقدر ما أثارته لديهم جريمة السحل هذه. ويُــقصد بهؤلاء البعض: مثقفون كانوا صامتين أغلب الوقت، أو سياسيون سلطويون، أو منتفعون من النظام السياسي، أو حتى أناس محايدون يتابعون الاحتجاجات عبر شاشات التلفاز.

لا يمكن تفسير هذه المفارقة إلا عند وضع الحدث في سياقه التاريخي والنفسي والسياسي بعيداً عن المغالطات التقييمية الناتجة عن التعميم المبسط أو الاتهامات المجانية المتبادلة. فهذه المفارقة التي يعيشها البعض هي في بنيتها النفسية تنتج عن واحد من تفسيرين:

1-هي مشاعر الذنب الجمعي المترسبة في الذاكرة السياسية، بسبب وصمة السحل الشعبوية المرافقة لتاريخنا السياسي المعاصر، وخاصة اغتيال العائلة المالكة 1958 والتمثيل بجثثهم، ورسوخ تلك المشاهد في الوجدان الشعبي بوصفها لحظة ذنب أليمة تثلم الذات الجماعية وتنتقص من قيمتها. فما تزال تلك اللحظة الذاكراتية المتوارثة جيلياً تشكل عقدة سردية راسخة عن "عنفية"الشخصية العراقية، و"حتمية"لجوئها إلى القسوة في لحظات الاحتدام السياسي. فالعقل الباطن هنا يظل متأثراً بمشاهد القتل التي ترتكبها الجماهير أكثر من تأثره بتلك التي ترتكبها السلطة، بالرغم من أن كفة السلطة ظلت هي الراجحة في ميزان القتل السادي طوال تاريخ العراق المعاصر. وقد استثمرت السلطة الحالية مشاعر الذنب الجمعي الكامنة هذه لإعادة تأويل هذه الجريمة بوصفها "دليلاً"على جوهرانية العنف في سلوك المحتجين قاطبة.

2- أو هي فرصة منتظرة لدى البعض الآخر ممن يبحثون قصدياً بشكل محموم عن أي ممارسات أو "مؤامرات"لتخوين الاحتجاجات السلمية، لتبرير سلبيتهم السياسية والوطنية لا شعورياً، أو للدفاع الواعي عن مصالحهم المباشرة أو غير المباشرة مع نسيج السلطة إذ يشعرون أن ثمة رابطة مصيرية تجمعهم مع المنظومة الحاكمة رغم إدراكهم لجرائمها وخطاياها. كما تقف ضمن هذا السياق قوى الثورة المضادة بأصنافها السياسية والثقافية والأيديولوجية، إذ تمارس ستراتيجية الإنكار لعنف السلطة والتهويل لعنف الجمهور في إطار ديماجوجي انتقائي.

لقد كشفت هذه الحادثة بوضوح أن مسألة الحرارة الوجدانية أو البرود الوجداني في التفاعل مع جرائم العنف السياسي (أيا كان مصدرها: السلطة أم الجمهور)، يظل خاضعاً لدى فئات اجتماعية وسياسية مهمة لعمليات ما دون العقل، أي لدفاعات نفسية لاشعورية، ولتشوهات ادراكية انتقائية، ولنزعات ميكيافيلية ونفعية، خارج أطر التفكير الموضوعي والحجج العقلية المُسندة والتعاطف الثابت مع كل الضحايا دون تمييز.
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إن سيكولوجيا الانتقاص من الضحية، وشيطنتها، والتنكيل المعنوي والجسدي بها، وتأثيم مساعيها لاستعادة حقوقها، وإلصاق تهمة الخطيئة بها، دون اكتراث كاف بإظهار جوهر المظالم وأصل الجريمة وتحديد هوية الجاني، إنما هو سلوك اجتماعي واسع الانتشار في سياقات حياتية متنوعة، فردياً وجماعياً، في كل المجتمعات البشرية، له أسبابه النفعية الواعية، وأيضاً له دينامياته التبريرية اللاواعية. وتوجد تنظيرات عميقة ومباحث أكاديمية شاسعة في مدياتها التفسيرية لهذا الشأن.

إلا أن هذا السلوك – بوصفه جزءً من الطبيعة البشرية- يتخذ أوقات الانزياحات السياسية العميقة من عصر خضوعي إلى عصر تحرري، منحىً سادياً باهظ التكاليف، إذ يصبح جزءً مهماً من الفعل المضاد للتقدم.

وبتعبيرٍ استشرافي يخص الحراك التشريني الحاليأقول: إن استمرار هذا الحراك بالتعبئة الاحتجاجية الأفقية الواسعة فقط دونما ظهور هيكلية قيادية أو ائتلاف تنظيمي لتنسيق الرؤى وتوحيد السياسات بالحد الأدنى، يعني أن هذا السلوك (أي شيطنة الضحية المحتجة) سيصبح بمرور الوقت جزءً فاعلاً من "الثورة المضادة"، أي تحشيداً سيكولوجياً متزايداً، يضفي رصيداً سياسياً "منقذاً"إلى الرصيد الخاوي للسلطة.

 نرحب بالضيف المساهم ، الدكتور فارس كمال نظمي ، رئيس الجمعية العراقية لعلم النفس السياسي ، ومؤلف العديد من الدراسات حول السياسة والمجتمع العراقي.

The Killing of Qasem Suleimani and Iraq’s October Revolution: What Western Analysts Aren’t Telling You and What You Need to Know

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The unexpected killing of Qasem Suleimani came as a shock.  What is likewise a shock is the narrowly construed discussion of the meaning and ramifications of his killing by analysts in the West. Rather than situate Suleimani’s killing in a historical context, or broader political and economic processes in the MENA region, the discussion has largely focused on personalities, remaining descriptive rather than explanatory.

Despite the extensive international coverage of the strike which killed Suleimani, the Western public has been left with little more than a large collection of disjointed facts.  By focusing on (male) authoritarian leaders, who are corrupt and completely out of touch with the region’s citizenry, Western analysts tell us much about individual political leaders, who come and go, but little about the significant changes taking place in the MENA region today.

What does ignoring one of the largest sustained uprisings in Iraq since the June October, 1920 Revolution (al-Thawra al-cIraqiya al-Kubra) tell us about the state of analysis of MENA region politics by Western analysts?  What do we need to know to gain such an understanding but which has been neglected thus far?  Why is the focus confined to political actors and elites to the detriment of important social forces and movements currently underway in the region?

One notable lacuna among Western analysts is the huge youth uprising which has been taking place in Iraq.  Another neglected issue is the relationship between Suleimani’s killing and the ongoing youth uprising in Iraq. In its fourth month, the October Revolution (Thawrat Tishreen) is comparable to the Arab Spring uprisings, if not larger.  Led by youth,  the uprising has demanded the complete restructuring of the Iraqi political system and the implementation of a true democracy.  It has already led to the resignation of Iraq’s prime minister and forced Iraq’s political elite to engage in serious discussions over changing the structure of Iraq’s political system.

Unlike Suleimani’s killing, the October Revolution continues to be almost completely ignored by Western analysts and the media.  The uprising has mobilized thousands of Iraqi youth and many supporters among older Iraqis, e.g., oil workers and professional associations, who demand an end to corrupt governance, the provision of jobs, and an improvement in state social services. However, their most important demand is establishing a new truly democratic political system, one characterized by social democracy.

First, Western analysts neither understand nor take seriously the massive generational change which is currently underway in the MENA region.  In Iraq, as in many MENA region countries, youth constitute 70% of the population under the age of 30, namely 27.5 of Iraq’s 39 million population.  Many of these youth, whether poor or highly educated, see little hope in the future. 

Inefficient public sector economies and endemic corruption, where government jobs are limited to those with political connections (al-wasta), can’t address the employment needs of the large numbers of youth who enter the job market each year. or those without skills who remained under- or unemployed

The youth uprising in Iraq has been replicated by youth uprisings throughout the MENA region. Demonstrations in Sudan, in which youth were the vanguard, brought down the despicable tyrant, General Omar Bashir, who is now being tried for crimes against humanity.  A three year transitional government comprised of civilians and military officers is now planning for democratic elections after the period concludes.Omar al-Bashir convicted of corruption

In Algeria, youth demonstrations forced its octogenarian president, Abdel Aziz Bouteflika, to finally resign after he indicated he would seek a fifth term in office. Youth subsequently helped organize a national  boycott of recent presidential elections because the Algerian political elite has refused to make the necessary concessions demanded by the protesters. Still, the newly elected president has already implemented new policies, indicating that he realizes that significant reforms of Algeria’s political system need to be made if youth and the populace are to be placated.

In Lebanon, a county on the brink of financial collapse, youth protesters forced Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri to resign and have kept up pressure on the government to enact political reforms. In response, the government has created a commission to study Lebanon’s existential financial crisis. Whether this commission will be able to address Lebanon’s economic problems in any meaningful manner has yet to be seen.

Lebanon’s financial crisis is the result of successive governments having ignored its massive corruption which plagues almost all countries of the MENA region. While Hizballah, supported by Iran, has tried to shut down the protests, just like the pro-Iranian militias in Iraq which have attacked youth demonstrators, the Lebanese youth protesters have been unbowed in keeping their protests going.

Of course, Iranian youth have likewise been protesting against massive corruption in the state apparatus and the lack of jobs accompanied by the rapid deterioration of the economy. Many youth have raised the question, asked by many other Iranians: Why do the Tehran mullahs spend so much funds on supporting the al-Asad regime in Syria, Hizballah in Lebanon, the so-called Popular Mobilization Units (al-Hashad al-Shacbi) Iraq and the Houthi rebels in Yemen given domestic economic needs?

Second, an important development which has yet to be analyzed is the tolerance promoted by the youth protest movement in Iraq, and youth movements elsewhere in the MENA region, and its complete rejection of sectarianism.  The focus on Suleimani has raised yet again the facile binary which characterizes the analysis of Middle East politics, the so-called Sunni-Shica divide.  Iran is a Shica majority state while its arch-enemy, Saudi Arabia is Sunni Muslim. But youth will have none of it.  Sectarianism has been banned from their kingdom and is correctly viewed as a ploy to “divide and conquer” to promote the political and economic interests of corrupt ruling elites.

A problem arises when analysts try to apply this ethnoconfessional binary to the October Revolution.  The overwhelming majority of the protestors are from Baghdad and the south of Iraq and hence Shica.  This fact has frustrated the Iraqi government, which is controlled by Shica parties and the Iranian-funded militias which are likewise Shica. Thus, the sectarian card has been  unavailable for Baghdad’s sectarian entrepreneurs to exploit and divert attention from the revolution's valid complaints.

Unlike many Western analysts, the youth are much more sophisticated in their own understandings of the dynamics of local MENA region politics. Because the vast majority of the youth demonstrators in Iraq are Shica, Sunni youth, who support the uprising, have avoided acting as an identifiable group, thus preventing the Iraqi government from using sectarian criteria to oppose the uprising and its legitimate calls for political and social change.

In other words, if Arab Sunni youth became involved in large numbers in Sunni majority areas in al-Anbar, Ninawa and Salah al-Din provinces, for example, sectarian elements in the Iraqi government could then argue that the uprising was sponsored by the Da’ish (so-called Islamic State) terrorist organization.  Instead, Arab Sunni youth have expressed support from afar or participated on an individual basis with their Shica sisters and brothers in Baghdad and the cities and towns of the south - al-Basra, al-Najaf, Karbala', al-Nasiroiya, Babil, Hit, Kut and many others.

A third issue which has been neglected by analysts is how Suleimani’s killing underscores the fallacy of viewing the Middle East through a sectarian lens.  Despite Suleimani’s support for sectarian forces in the Mashriq region of the Middle East, whether Bashar al-Asad's regime, Lebanon's Hizballah militia, or the People’s Mobilization Units (al-Hashad al-Shacbi) in Iraq, his killing has little to do with Shica or Sunni interpretations of Islam.  While Suleimani was a sectarian entrepreneur who used sect to promote his agenda, his core agenda was always about expanding Iran’s political, military and economic power in the Middle East and had little to do with religion.

The framing of Suleimani’s death, and his accomplice in crime and mayhem, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the head of Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Units and the Kata’ib Hizballah militia, in terms of sectarian identities not only fails to take generational change into account but conforms to the static and ill-defined binary which so many analysts fall prey to, namely seeing the Middle East as defined by a monumental struggle between Sunnis and Shica (whos dynamics are assumed but rarely if ever explained).

In terms of the October Revolution, this fallacy has led Western analysts to underestimate the dynamics behind youth politics throughout the region, including the current youth revolution in Iraq.  It is telling that the youth who support the October Revolution have explicitly and very vocally rejected sectarianism which they rightfully see as a divisive force which is manipulated by domestic political elites. 

A fourth element of the October Revolution is how its initial demands represent the tip of the iceberg.  Iraq's youth uprising, which began in early October 2019, quickly morphed into a demand for a complete restructuring of the Iraqi political system and the establishment of true (social) democracy in Iraq.  First and foremost, the protestors have called for replacing the party list system with single member electoral districts.

This new system would eliminate the despised “quota system” (nathâm al-muhassasât) which allocates seats in Iraq’s Council of Delegates (parliament) and among cabinet ministers according to deals cut between victorious parties following national elections.  This system allocates the ceremonial role of president to a Kurd, the position of prime minister to an Arab Shici, and the Speaker of the Council of Deputies to a Sunni Arab. 

Following the demands of the youth protestors, the institution of prime minister would be eliminated in favor of a presidential system. Registered voters throughout Iraq would elect a president who would not be associated with a particular sect, ethnicity or region of the country.

Under the new political structure advocated by the October Revolution, the informal “confessional system” (similar to Lebanon) would be eliminated.  This system was facilitated by the US occupation of Iraq in 2003.  The Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), headed by former diplomat, L. Paul Bremer, set a disastrous example by creating the first sectarian based government in the form of the Iraqi Governing Council which chose members based on their religious sect or ethnicity.

A final demand of the youth activists is that Iran leave Iraq (irhal Iran!).  This call is meant to terminate the power of the Popular Mobilization Units, especially the largest groups which are funded by Iran.  Not only are these groups well-armed, but they are politically powerful with  and creating a state within a state in Iraq.  The militias have also begun to develop their own financial interests in Iraq through becoming involved in smuggling and other illicit and quasi-legal economic activities. In short, the al-Hashad al-Shacbi have dramatically extended Iran’s influence in Iraq and control over its political system and economy.

To return to the question raised earlier, the killing of Qasem Suleimani, and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. infuriated Iran and its proxy militias in Iraq. Viewed in zero-sum terms, Iran and its local agents say the killings as promoting US power and influence in Iraq at the expense of Iran.




مقتل سليماني وثورة تشرين في العراق: ما الذي عجز المحللون الغربيون ان يوصلونه لك وما الذي تحتاج ان تعرفه

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شكل مقتل سليماني، غير المتوقع، صدمة للكثيرين حيث لا يوازيها شيء سوى الصدمة التي انتابت المحللين الغربيين الذين انشغلوا بتحليل اسباب وتداعيات مقتله. وبدلا من وضع عملية قتله في سياق تاريخي، أو مناقشتها ضمن عمليات سياسية واقتصادية أوسع في منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا، الا ان المناقشات تركزت إلى حد كبير على الشخصيات وقد 

كانت هذه المناقشات وصفية أكثر منها توضيحية وهذا بحد ذاته يعتبر قصورا في فهم المشهد العام
على الرغم من التغطية الدولية الواسعة للضربة الجوية التي اودت بحياة سليماني، وزعيم المليشيا العراقي، أبو مهدي المهندس الذي كان يرافقه، لم يقدم للجمهور الغربي سوى مجموعة كبيرة من الحقائق المفككة. ومن خلال التركيز على الزعماء الاستبداديين والفاسدين دون التطرق للمواطنين من اهل المنطقة. وترى المحللين الغربين يتحدثون كثيرا عن الزعماء السياسيين الذين يأتون ويذهبون، لكنهم لا يتحدثون كثيرا عن التغييرات المهمة التي تحدث في منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا

ما الذي نستشفه من حالة التجاهل لواحدة من أكبر الانتفاضات المستمرة في تاريخ العراق منذ ثورة العشرين (الثورة
 العراقية الكبرى) عن وضعية مستوى التحليل لسياسات منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا من قبل المحللين الغربيين؟
ما الذي نحتاج إلى معرفته لكي نفهم أسباب هذا التجاهل طوال هذه الفترة؟ لماذا يقتصر التركيز على الجهات الفاعلة والنخب السياسية على حساب القوى الاجتماعية والحركات المهمة التي تجري حاليًا في المنطقة؟

تتمثل إحدى الثغرات البارزة لدى المحللين الغربيين في انتفاضة الشباب الضخمة التي تحدث في العراق وغيرها من بلدان منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا. وهناك قضية أخرى قد تم اهمالها ترتبط بالعلاقة بين مقتل سليماني وانتفاضة الشباب المستمرة في العراق منذ الأول من أكتوبر (ثورة تشرين) التي يمكن مقارنتها مع ثورات الربيع العربي، إن لم تكن أكبر.

وقد طالبت الانتفاضة تحت قيادة الشباب بإعادة هيكلة النظام السياسي العراقي بشكل كامل وتطبيق الديمقراطية الحقيقية
 وقد أدى ذلك بالفعل إلى استقالة رئيس الوزراء العراقي عادل عبد المهدي، وأجبرت النخبة السياسية في العراق على الدخول في مناقشات جادة بشأن تغيير هيكل النظام السياسي في العراق.

وعلى عكس مقتل سليماني، فإن ثورة أكتوبر لازالت وسائل الاعلام والمحللين السياسيين يتجاهلونها بشكل شبه كامل،وقد حشدت الانتفاضة الآلاف من الشباب العراقي والعديد من المؤيدين لهم من كبار السن من العراقيين، وكذلك على سبيل المثال عمال النفط والنقابات المهنية، الذين يطالبون بإنهاء الحكم الفاسد، وتوفير فرص العمل، وتحسين الخدمات الاجتماعية الحكومية. وقد كان أهم مطلب لهم هو إنشاء نظام سياسي ديمقراطي حقيقي جديد، يتميز بالديمقراطية الاجتماعية.
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أولاً، اما ان المحللين الغربيين لا يفهمون التغيير الهائل لدى الأجيال او قد لا يأخذونه على محمل الجد ما يحدث حاليًا في منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا. وفي العراق، كما هو الحال في العديد من بلدان منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا، يشكل الشباب 70٪ من السكان دون سن الثلاثين، أي بواقع 27.5 مليون من 39 مليون نسمة في العراق. ويعاني الكثير من هؤلاء الشباب من حالة الفقر ومنهم من لديه مستوى دراسي عالي الا ان فرصهم المستقبلية شحيحة

ولا يمكن لاقتصاد القطاع العام الذي يفتقد الي النشاط والذي يتركز في بيئة حيث يستشري الفساد اذ تقتصر الوظائف الحكومية على من لهم علاقات سياسية (ما يسمى بالواسطة)، تلبية احتياجات العمالة حيث الأعداد الكبيرة من الشباب
الذين يدخلون سوق العمل كل عام، أو أولئك الذين ليس لديهم مهارات ممن يعانون من البطالة

تكررت انتفاضة الشباب العراقي في جميع أنحاء منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا، حيث مظاهرات السودان، التي كان في طليعتها الشباب وقد تمخضت عن اسقاط الطاغية، اللواء عمر البشير، الذي يحاكم الآن لارتكابه جرائم ضد الإنسانية. وتخطط الحكومة الانتقالية التي تتألف من مدنيين وضباط عسكريين والتي مدتها ثلاث سنوات، لإجراء انتخابات ديمقراطية بعد انتهاء هذه المدة. وقد أدين عمر البشير بسبب ارتكابه اعمال فساد. Omar al-Bashir convicted of corruption

اما في الجزائر، فقد أجبرت مظاهرات الشباب رئيسها الراحل عبد العزيز بوتفليقة على الاستقالة بعد أن سعى إلى الحصول على ولاية خامسة. وقد ساعد الشباب بعد ذلك على تنظيم مقاطعة وطنية للانتخابات الرئاسية أنداك لأن النخبة السياسية الجزائرية رفضت تقديم التنازلات اللازمة التي طالب بها المتظاهرون. ومع ذلك، فإن الرئيس المنتخب حديثًا قد طبق بالفعل سياسات جديدة، مشيرًا إلى أنه يدرك أن هناك حاجة لإصلاحات كبيرة في النظام السياسي الجزائري إذا ما اريد استرضاء الجماهير وبضمنهم الشباب.

وفي لبنان، الذي يمكن ان يكون على حافة الانهيار المالي، أجبر المتظاهرون الشباب هناك رئيس الوزراء سعد الحريري على الاستقالة وواصلوا الضغط على الحكومة من اجل إحداث إصلاحات سياسية. ونتيجة لذلك الضغط فقد شكلت الحكومة لجنة لدراسة الأزمة المالية اللبنانية التي تهدد الجميع. ولم يعرف لحد الان فيما إذا كانت هذه اللجنة ستتمكن من معالجة مشاكل لبنان الاقتصادية بطريقة فعالة

ان الأزمة المالية في لبنان هي نتيجة لتجاهل الحكومات المتعاقبة للفساد الهائل الذي تعاني منه معظم بلدان منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا تقريبًا. وبينما حاول حزب الله، المدعوم من إيران، إيقاف الاحتجاجات، على طريقة الميليشيات الموالية لإيران في العراق التي تهاجم المتظاهرين الشباب، فإن المتظاهرين اللبنانيين الشباب لم يتقهقروا واستمروا بمواصلة الاحتجاجات.

اما الشباب الإيراني فقد كانوا يحتجون كذلك على الفساد الهائل في جهاز الدولة ونقص الوظائف المصحوب بالتدهور السريع للاقتصاد. لقد طرح العديد من الشباب السؤال الذي طرحه العديد من الإيرانيين الآخرين: لماذا ينفق الملالي في طهران الكثير من الأموال لدعم نظام الأسد في سوريا، وحزب الله في لبنان، وما يسمى فصائل الحشد الشعبي في العراق والمتمردون الحوثيون في اليمن بالرغم من الضائقة الاقتصادية المحلية؟ 
ثانيًا ان أحد التطورات المهمة التي لم يتناولها المحللون بعد هو التسامح الذي تروج له حركة احتجاجات الشباب في العراق، وحركات الشباب في أماكن أخرى من منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا، ورفضها التام للطائفية الا ان التركيز على سليماني مرة أخرى يبين الازدواجية التي تميز تحليل سياسات الشرق الأوسط، وما يسمى بالانقسام السني - الشيعي. اذ ان ايران دولة ذات أغلبية شيعية في حين أن المملكة العربية السعودية عدوها اللدود دولة سنية؛ لكن الشباب لن يكون لديهم شيء

من هذا فقد تم حظر الطائفية من مملكتها وينظر إليها بشكل صحيح على أنها "خدعة للتغلب على هذا الطرف او تقسيمه"ولتعزيز المصالح السياسية والاقتصادية للنخب الحاكمة الفاسدة

وتبرز هناك مشكلة أخرى عندما يحاول المحللون تطبيق هذا الثنائي العرقي (السني – الشيعي) على ثورة أكتوبر. ان الغالبية العظمى من المتظاهرين هم من بغداد وجنوب العراق حيث الغالبية الشيعية. لقد اسقطت هذه الحقيقة الحكومة العراقية، التي تسيطر عليها أحزاب الشيعة والميليشيات التي تمولها إيران والتي هي شيعية كذلك. وبالتالي، فإن الهوية الطائفية لم تكن متاحة لأصحاب المشاريع الطائفية في بغداد لاستغلال وتحويل الانتباه عن المطالب الحقيقية للثورة وأسباب قيامها


على عكس العديد من المحللين الغربيين، فإن الشباب أكثر تطوراً في فهمهم لديناميكيات سياسات منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا المحلية. لأن الغالبية العظمى من المتظاهرين الشباب في العراق هم من الشيعة، فقد تجنب الشباب السني، الذين يدعمون الانتفاضة، العمل كمجموعة محددة، وبالتالي منع الحكومة العراقية من استخدام المعايير الطائفية لمعارضة الانتفاضة ودعواتها المشروعة لإحداث التغيير السياسي والاجتماعي المطلوب

بمعنى آخر، إذا انخرط الشباب السني العربي بأعداد كبيرة في المناطق ذات الأغلبية السنية في محافظات الأنبار ونينوى وصلاح الدين، على سبيل المثال، يمكن للعناصر الطائفية في الحكومة العراقية أن تجادل بأن الانتفاضة كانت برعاية داعش او ما يسمى (الدولة الإسلامية) وهي منظمة إرهابية. وبدلاً من ذلك، فقد عبر الشباب السني العربي عن دعمهم من بعيد أو شاركوا على أساس فردي مع أخواتهم من الشيعة وإخوانهم في بغداد ومدن الجنوب - البصرة والنجف وكربلاء والناصرية وبابل، والديوانية، والحلة، الكوت وغيرها

المسألة الثالثة التي أهملها المحللون هي التي تؤكد كيف ان مقتل سليماني يثبت ان النظر إلى الشرق الأوسط من خلال عدسة طائفية مسالة خاطئة. على الرغم من دعم سليماني للقوات الطائفية في الجزء الشرقي لمنطقة الشرق الأوسط، سواء كان نظام بشار الأسد أو ميليشيا حزب الله اللبنانية أو فصائل الحشد الشعبي في العراق، فإن اغتياله ليس له علاقة تذكر بالتأويلات السنية او الشيعية للإسلام. فقد كان سليماني رجل أعمال طائفي استخدم الطائفة للترويج لجدول أعماله، كان جدول أعماله الأساسي دائمًا يتعلق بتوسيع القوة السياسية والعسكرية والاقتصادية لإيران في الشرق الأوسط وليس له علاقة بالدين

ان وضع وفاة سليماني، وشريكه في الجريمة والفوضى، أبو مهدي المهندس، نائب رئيس هيئة الحشد الشعبي ومؤسس ميليشيا كتائب حزب الله، في إطار محدد من حيث الهويات الطائفية، لم يفشل في ان يأخذ في الحسبان تغيير الأجيال فقط بل يتوافق مع الثنائي الثابت وغير المحدد الذي يقع الكثير من المحللين فريسة له، أي رؤية الشرق الأوسط في إطار محدد وهو الصراع الكبير بين السنة والشيعة (التي يزعم بوجود ديناميكيتاها التي تفتقر الى التفسير))

بالنسبة لثورة أكتوبر، دفعت هذه المغالطة المحللين الغربيين إلى التقليل من أهمية الديناميكيات وراء السياسات الشبابية في جميع أنحاء المنطقة، بما في ذلك ثورة الشباب الحالية في العراق. إنها تبين لنا بأن الشباب الذين يدعمون ثورة أكتوبر قد رفضوا الطائفية بشكل واضح وصريح لأنهم يرونها بحق قوة خلافية تتلاعب بها النخب السياسية المحلية.


العنصر الرابع لثورة أكتوبر كيف ان مطالبها الأولية تمثل قمة جبل الجليد. آن انتفاضة شباب العراق، والتي بدأت في أوائل أكتوبر 2019، قد تحولت مطالبها بسرعة إلى المطالبة بإعادة هيكلة النظام السياسي العراقي بشكل كامل وإقامة ديمقراطية (اجتماعية) حقيقية في العراق. أولاً وقبل كل شيء، دعا المتظاهرون إلى استبدال نظام قائمة الأحزاب بدوائر انتخابية متعددة ذات مرشح واحد. وسيؤدي هذا النظام الجديد إلى القضاء على نظام المحاصصة الذي على أساسه توزع المناصب الحكومية في داخل وخارج مجلس الوزراء وفقًا للصفقات المبرمة بين الأحزاب الفائزة في الانتخابات العامة. ووفقا لنظام المحاصصة يكون منصب رئيس الجمهورية، وهو منصب تشريفي، من حصة الاكراد ومنصب رئيس الوزراء للعرب الشيعة اما منصب رئيس مجلس النواب فيكون للعرب السنة

وفي أعقاب مطالب المحتجين الشباب، سيتم التخلي عن النظام الذي يكون فيه رئيس الوزراء هو الرئيس التنفيذي الذي ينتخبه البرلمان لصالح نظام رئاسي حيث سينتخب الناخبون المسجلون في جميع أنحاء العراق رئيسًا لا يرتبط بطائفة أو عرق أو منطقة معينة من البلاد

وفي ظل الهيكل السياسي الجديد الذي دعت إليه ثورة أكتوبر، سيتم القضاء على "النظام الطائفي"غير الرسمي الذي يشبه ما معمول به في (لبنان). وقد تم العمل في هذا النظام خلال الاحتلال الأمريكي للعراق في عام 2003 حيث شكلت سلطة التحالف المؤقتة، التي كان يرأسها الدبلوماسي السابق، ل. بول بريمر، نموذجا
كارثياً من خلال إنشاء أول حكومة طائفية تتخذ شكل مجلس الحكم العراقي. الذي تم اختيار أعضائه على أسس طائفية وعرقية.

المطلب الأخير للناشطين الشباب هو أن تغادر إيران العراق وهذا ما لاحظناه في هتافات الشباب (ارحل). تهدف هذه الدعوة إلى إنهاء سلطة فصائل الحشد الشعبي، وخاصة الجماعات الكبيرة التي تمولها إيران. هذه الجماعات ليست مدججة بالسلاح فحسب، بل إنها قوية سياسيا لانها خلقت كيان داخل الدولة العراقية أي اوجدت دولة داخل دولة. كما بدأت الميليشيات في تطوير مصالحها المالية الخاصة في العراق من خلال الانخراط في التهريب وغيرها من الأنشطة الاقتصادية غير القانونية وشبه القانونية. باختصار، قام الحشد الشعبي بتوسيع نفوذ إيران بشكل كبير في العراق وسيطرته على نظامه السياسي والاقتصادي

وبالعودة إلى السؤال الذي طرحناه سابقا، ان مقتل قاسم سليماني وأبو مهدي المهندس قد أغضب إيران والميليشيات التابعة لها في العراق. وبمنظار الربح والخسارة فان إيران ووكلائها المحليين، يرون ان عملية قتل سليماني والمهندس تعزز قوة الولايات المتحدة ونفوذها في العراق على حساب إيران.

منذ بداية المظاهرات التي طالبت بإجراء تغيير ديمقراطي، تعرض أنصار ثورة أكتوبر لهجمات متكررة من قبل قوات الأمن العراقية وخاصة من قبل العديد من افراد قوة الرد السريع التابعة لوزارة الداخلية الذين هم في الواقع تابعين للمليشيات التي تمولها إيران والتي اضطرت الوزارة لدمجهم في صفوفها على الرغم من افتقارهم إلى التدريب العسكري الكافي.
ويطلق على هؤلاء المنتسبين بـ (الدمج) ويمتازون بمعاملتهم الوحشية للمتظاهرين ورد فعلهم العيف على المتظاهرين الشباب العزل ردودها على الرغم من عدم وجود أي تقارير حول ممارسة العنف من قبل المتظاهرين، وقد استخدمت هذه القوات عبوات الغاز المسيل للدموع من الدرجة العسكرية، أي عشرة أضعاف وزن تلك المستخدمة للسيطرة على الاحتجاجات المدنية، واستهدفت رؤوس المتظاهرين مما تسببت بإصابات بليغة في صفوفهم.

وقد تصاعد العنف مع مقتل سليماني والمهندس ولم يقتصر الأمر على تعرض المتظاهرين للهجوم أثناء احتجاجاتهم، بل قامت المليشيات في المساء بمهاجمة المحتجين وحرق الخيام التي أقاموها في ساحات المدن، مثل بغداد والبصرة
والناصرية. ورغم ذلك فقد أظهر المتظاهرون في الناصرية براعتهم من خلال إعادة بناء ملاجئهم باستخدام البلوك حتى لا تتمكن الميليشيات من تدميرها بسهولة. Nasiriya with -Iraqi youth protestors building shelters in al.bricks
سفراء 16 دولة في بغداد يدينون قتل الحكومة العراقية للمتظاهرين المسالمين:

وعلى الصعيد الدولي، بدأت أعمال العنف التي تُستخدم لقمع احتجاجات الشباب يتردد صداها ضد الحكومة العراقية حيث في الآونة الأخيرة أدانت سفارات 16 دولة مختلفة في العراق مقتل ما يزيد عن 600 شاب عراقي وجرح أكثر من 20.000 هذا بالإضافة إلى اختطاف العديد من المتظاهرين والناشطين الذين لم يسمع عنهم منذ اختفائهم، وذكر آخرون أنهم تعرضوا للتعذيب قبل إطلاق سراحهم. Ambassadors of 16 countries in Baghdad condemn Iraqi government killing of peaceful protestors

وفي الوقت نفسه، يدرك عدد قليل من المحللين الغربيين أهمية عملية التثقيف عندما يكون العمل في جو الانتفاضة الثورية. الشباب الذين يتظاهرون يقضون الكثير من الوقت معًا. ترى ماذا يحدث عندما يجتمع الشباب العراقي للاحتجاج؟
هذه المرة لا يقتصر الامر فقط على الاحتجاج في أجزاء مختلفة من المدن والمناطق العراقية المختلفة، بل يتعداه الى الاجتماع لمناقشة أسباب سخطهم وحنقهم على الوضع الراهن، وما هو المجتمع الجديد الذي يطمحون به؟

انهم يأملون في تحسن حياتهم وحياة جميع العراقيين. ان هذا التفاعل والحراك اليومي للمتظاهرين الشباب لم يتم بعد إدراك تأثيره على المدى البعيد.
وتمثل ملصقاتهم وأعمالهم الفنية مؤشراً واحداً على المجتمع المتحرر الجديد الذي ينشدونه. سيكون هذا المجتمع خالياً من الطائفية المتمحورة حول الذات ويعزز الديمقراطية الاجتماعية والتسامح والمساواة بين الجنسين، مما يمنح المرأة مكانتها المناسبة في المجتمع العراقي

ما الذي يمكن عمله لمساعدة ثورة أكتوبر على تحقيق أهدافها؟ هذا موضوع سينشر لاحقا. ومع ذلك، يتعين على الأمم المتحدة والولايات المتحدة والاتحاد الأوروبي ومجتمعات المغتربين العراقيين تشكيل تحالف دولي ينسق مراقبة ردود فعل الحكومة العراقية على الاحتجاجات. ويتوجب على هذا التحالف

أيضًا جمع معلومات عن العراقيين الذين قتلوا أو أصيبوا على أيدي قوات الأمن والتي يمكن استخدامها في المحاكمات المحتملة في المحكمة الجنائية الدولية ومحكمة العدل الدولية.
وبالعودة الى مقتل قاسم سليماني الذي ابتدأ به المقال، نحتاج أن نتذكر أنه كان مجرد فرد مهم لكن لابد من استبعاد فكرة عدم إمكانية قتله. فقد تم تعيين قائدا جديد لقوات القدس خلفا له وتم تعيين مجموعة من الضباط الشباب في قيادة قوة الحرس الثوري الإيراني. ومن جهة أخرى لا يمكن للحرس الثوري الإيراني أن يحسن الاقتصاد الإيراني، ويخلق فرص عمل للإيرانيين العاطلين عن العمل، ويتصدى لمطالب الشباب المتعلمين الذين يقبعون تحت قيود النظام السياسي القمعي الذي يرى أن الإبداع الفردي يشكل تهديدًا لسلطته.

كان سليماني مجرد جزء في عجلة إيرانية تسعى إلى السيطرة الإقليمية على البحر المتوسط ومنطقة الخليج، وهذه أهداف لا يمكن ان تحققها أبدًا

,إن ثورة أكتوبر برفضها للطائفية وسعيها لتحقيق الديمقراطية الاجتماعية والتسامح والمساواة بين الجنسين والحريات الشخصية لا تمثل مجرد هدف وطني عراقي، على عكس الجهود التي كان يبذلها سليماني لفرض الهيمنة الإقليمية لإيران
فإن انتفاضة شباب العراق تعكس رغبة عالمية تتميز بها الشعوب المحبة للحرية في جميع أنحاء العالم
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