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The Emerging
Iraqi Polity: A Case for US-Iran Cooperation
Nasser Hadian-Jazy
Over the course of the last few decades, Saddam’s Ba’ath
party apparatus destroyed every feasible form of civil
society and prevented the emergence of any autonomous
associations and institutions. He ruled through terror
and fear. The resemblance with pre-revolutionary
Iran
is striking. The only remaining autonomous institution
in 1970s Iranian society was the clerical network.
Mosques were an important public space available to
masses and elites for debating and adopting goals and
objectives for their collective actions and designing
strategies to achieve them. This is the case in today’s
Iraq.
The Shiite clerical network, in
Iraq
as well as in
Iran, is relatively hierarchical, with the Supreme
Jurisprudent at the top, learned Ayatollahs in the
middle, and the lower ranking clergy among the people in
the rural areas and small towns. The pinnacle of the
hierarchy expands from Qum
to Najaf (the two main centers of learning in
Iran and Iraq
respectively) and consists of deep relationships between
the clerics of the two cities. The structure, content
and language of their training are almost identical.
Intermarriage between them further solidifies their
relationship. This establishment has influence within
Shiite villages and towns in Iran and Iraq both. Even
withstanding the rivalry that exists between these two
centers of learning, substantial influence can be
transmitted from the Qum
clergy to
Iraq, and from the Najaf clergy to Iran. Historically,
this has indeed been the case. The return of Ayatollah
Hakim and a number of other senior clerics who have been
residing in Qum
as a result of Saddam’s repression, along with the Badr
Brigade and other Iraqi exiles, can seriously influence
the course of events in
Iraq. It is reported
that a number of Shiites who have returned from Iran are
already in positions of governance in Iraq.
This powerful clerical network presents an organized
force with the ability to set objectives, and ultimately
set an agenda for society. Given the current power
vacuum in Iraq, the clerics are best positioned to
organize and mobilize the masses. This is the case, not
only among the Shiites but also among the more religious
Sunnis. Mosques are excellent resources at the disposal
of the clerics’ for facilitating these processes. The
potential exists for a very powerful socio-political
movement to be generated by this force under the slogan
of: “No to occupation, yes to democracy.” A review of
recent events in post-war Iraq underscores the potential
power of this idea. Demonstrations under this slogan
are indeed becoming the most visible expressions of
“homegrown” empowerment.
Any government installed by the U.S. or U.S-appointed
Governing Council which is perceived as a puppet by the
majority of Iraqi citizens would fail. This would only
serve to strengthen the position of extremist forces
within Iraqi society. The credentials of the future
Iraqi leadership will be of utmost importance: an
established history of anti-Ba’athi struggle within
Iraq, of moderate religious background and no
fundamental allegiance to the United States or any
extremist party. The failure of the Allies to establish
this type of a leadership quickly will lead to the
exacerbation of anti-Americanism and a possible split in
the Governing Council. The world and its media can
expect to see millions of angry Iraqi citizens chanting
anti-occupation slogans with a still pro-democratic
leaning.
Iran is in the
position to influence greatly the tide of events in
Iraq. It
can, if it chooses, complicate the situation in Iraq by
fueling the anti-American mayhem, or it can play a
constructive role in containing extremism. The
initiative of calling for Iranian cooperation is now in
the hands of the United States. Iran and the U.S. share
a number of crucial interests (territorial integrity,
stability, fair representation for Shiite majority and
WMD disarmament) in
Iraq.
The current climate of U.S.-Iranian relations does not
lend itself to such a bold initiative. However, with the
future of Iraq
and the final verdict on the utility and legitimacy of
U.S.
intervention in the balance, this opportunity should be
taken not only to improve relations with
Tehran, but also to
lay a more solid foundation to manage the ever-complex
socio-religious and political fabric of the Iraqi polity
and move towards a stable and prosperous Iraq.
The current momentum should be utilized for U.S.-Iranian
rapprochement. A concrete proposal from the United
States to Iran that deals with issues of concern to both
sides, especially on the question of Iraq’s future, will
undeniably be well received in Tehran at this moment.
Nasser
Hadian-Jazy is a professor of international relations at
Tehran
University
in Iran. He is currently a visiting professor at the
School
of
International
and Public Affairs at Columbia
University.
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