A source on politics, war, the Middle East, Arabic poetry, and art.
Friday, August 12, 2005
"Clerics push for Shiastan in southern Iraq" (This position could perhaps signal the end of the modern Iraqi state.) As an anti-nationalist, I do not necessarily lament the fragmentation of a territory. The question for me is what kind of a new state will be established. Thus, I cannot celebrate the creation of an Israel-like enclave in the north--although I do support Kurdish national aspirations and even their territorial ambitions but I strongly oppose the politics of the two tribal Kurdish leaders who in the past had double-dealings with Saddam, and who killed thousands of Kurds in their civil wars), and a Shi`ite religious theocracy in the South. This will only guarantee the creation of a mini-Sunni enclave dominated by either Saddam's Ba`th or by Sunni fundamentalist demagogues, or by a combination of both.