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The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East An analysis by Ambassador Giulio Terzi di Sant'Agata
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The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
Speech by Amb. Giulio Terzi di Sant’Agata
2The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
Commemorations of WWI last August centred on lessons to be learned.
It is tempting to ask whether the increasing tensions around us accrue
the risk of a global security crises. Although during the last seven
decades regional tensions did never spare us, they are now happening
at a pace and to extent unheard of in the past; with ethnic and religious
conflicts; civil wars; implosion of dysfunctional States; surge of old and
new terrorist organisations.
This epidemics occur along a huge arc of crises and in our immediate
neighbourhood: from Mosul to Tikrit and Samarra; from Gaza to Bengasi,
Misurata and Tripoli; from Somalia to Nigeria, Mali and RCA; from
Donetsk to Sloviansk and Marioupol.
3The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
*THE SEEDS OF INSTABILITY affecting also our countries are mostly
planted in the "Great Mediterranean": the wide geopolitical reality
stretching from Gibraltar to Mesopotamia.
Iraq, Syria and Libya, three countries of a key importance for the
European security and economy, can be almost considered as "failed
states". Three countries with more than 62 million people, with huge
natural and human resources, and very young populations, positioned at
crossroads critical for the Middle East, North Africa and Europe. Their
sectarian strikes are spilling over their already unstable regions and, in a
way, over our Countries.
Hundreds of thousand of migrants from Syria, Iraq and Lybia land on our
shores; sunni militants of the Islamic State represent a direct threat for
the entire Middle East and even for us; the Shia-Sunni clash intensifies;
while intra Sunni divisions multiply; and horrible violence and
persecution of Christians, Yazidis and Kurds add to an already bleak
picture. As a consequence, Christians presence in those areas has
dropped from 20 to 5% in just a few decades.
4The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
Gaza has flared up three times since 2008, but no substantive
negotiation towards a "Two States solution" is currently alive even if the
Us and the Eu, like many Israelis believe that the status quo is
untenable.
Against this overall background the historic struggle between Sunnis and
Shias in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and the Gulf, in my opinion, represents by
far the major cause of concern and even more so, since it interacts with
other critical factors: with power sharing arrangements in Lebanon; with
the Iranian regional role and its nuclear program; with the relations
among the six members of the Gulf Cooperation Council.
The long waves of the Sunni- Shia struggle reach Egypt, Lybia, Algeria,
Somalia Kenya, Mali, Nigeria, and everywhere else fundamentalist
organizations exploit to their own advantage each point scored by their
associates in other parts of the Muslim world.
5The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
*THE SHIA REVIVAL
A fair reading of current events should first of all connect the present
situation to the fall of Saddam Hussein and of Iraqi institutional structure.
That gave way to the sudden empowerment of Iran as regional
kingmaker and uncontested Shia leader.
At a time when the Bush administration was still considering the military
"surge" in the Anbar and Neniveh Provinces, Professor Vali Nasr wrote
an important essay "The Shia revival":
"In Iraq, Vali Nasr said, Iran's primary objective is to ensure that
Baathism and Arab nationalism -Sunni rule in an altered guise-do not
return to power. The more violent the Sunni insurgency becomes and the
more Shias it kills, the more determined Iran grows...They see Iraq's
pacification under a Shia leadership as a strategic objective: what they
were not able to win in the Iran-Iraq war, they can now get courtesy of
coalition forces and the Shia Government in Baghdad...The war in Iraq
came at a time when Sunni extremism was on the rise in the Muslim
world...The decade preceding the war had witnessed the growing
influence of Wahabi and Salafi trends....The Iraq war provided a new
arena for this militancy".
6The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
This assessment, pronounced eight years ago for Iraq, still explains the
Iranian and Shia strategy in SYRIA today.
“The conflict now unfolding- Henry Kissinger notes in his World Order- is
both religious and geopolitical. There is a block lead by Shia Iran witch
backs Bashar Al Assad portion of Syria Nuri Al Maliki’s central and
southern Iraq, Hezbollah militias in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza and
there in a Sunni blog consisting of Saudi Arabia, the gulf states and to
some extent Egypt and Turkey. Iran aims for regional dominance by
employing non state actors tied to Tehran ideologically.”
Teheran has immediately perceived the existential threat of the "Arab
spring" for the Iranian Regime. Tens of thousand are still jailed in Evin or
other high security prisons; many have been intimidated, tortured,
hanged, after the demonstrations against the stolen presidential election
in 2009.The mass murders of PMOI's in Camp Liberty and Camp Ashraf,
UN protected persons, are a further example of the violent repression
the Iranian regime applies against political opponents inside and outside
the Country.
7The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
*A GLOBAL RELIGIOUS REVOLUTION
In the spring 2013 Ayatollahs Khamenei addressed a conference of
Muslim clerics and gave the Arab Spring meaning a new twist by calling
it “Arab Awakening”: “the world of Islam, said Khamenei, has now
emerged out of the side-lines of the social and political equation,
opening the door to a global religious revolution. All parts of the Islamic
Ummah should achieve the position specified in the Holy Quran”. By
saying so the supreme Leader was echoing both the Iranian constitution
where it refers to the Quran- “your community is a single community and
I’m your Lord- and to his predecessor Ayatollah Khomeini, when he
stated Islam refuses to recognize any difference between Muslim country
and it is the champion of all oppressed people”.
I did quote the two Supreme Leaders because it is important to
understand that the unity of Islam they were and they are advocating
should take place under the sole banner of Shia, with the coming of the
Mahdi returned from “occultation” to assume all is powers and to “ fill the
world with justice and beauty”.
8The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
Iran synthesizes complex legacies driven by internal dynamics by an
ultra millenary and diverse culture, and by a whole century of dramatics
shifts in the country struggles between its Persian soul and it’s theocratic
allegiance. Contemporary Iran seams decided to be a cause before
being a country. A cause for expanding the pre-eminence of Shia forces
regionally and globally.
The Arab Spring and the growth of Sunni Jihdism at Iran’s frontiers
maybe producing second thoughts in Teheran but it seems more lightly
that the Iranians are seeing their strategic landscape as one developing
in favour of a revolutionary course: in the region with the destabilization
of the Sunni monarchies opposed to Teheran; worldwide, as a revolution
against the westphalian order and the western influence.
9The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
How could the Ayatollahs have taken the risk of losing the Shia-Alawite
minority Government in Syria? How could they have given ground to
reformist movements? How could Khamenei have allowed a real
pluralism in Damascus and in Baghdad, with Governments opened to
the Sunni majority in Syria, and to the Sunni minority in Iraq?
As we all know, Iran didn't want to take any risk in Syria or elsewhere. An
expeditionary corps of Hezbollah, led by IRGC officers was send early
into the fight to support Assad. Iran engaged in a full scope diplomacy,
helped by Russia and to a lesser extent by China taking all the
opportunities given by the hesitance and lack of common strategies of
western Countries.
10The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
*CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS.
When Samuel Huntington wrote in the early '90s "The clash of
Civilizations" the common wisdom was that cultural, religious and ethnic
fractures between the "West and the Rest", between Christians and
Muslims, Buddist and Communist, were much deeper THAN the
fractures WITHIN the Muslim world itself: much deeper THAN the divide
between Sunnis and Shias, between the secular and the religious forces
of the political Islam.
Although al Qaeda and the plethora of Jihadist groups have never
ceased to threaten both the Muslim world and our societies, many fear
that a worrisome, millenary "clash" will re-emerge today. The so cold
"islamic civil wars", hundreds of years before the Crusaders, did mark
the age of the four Caliphs, the massacre of Karbala, the killing of
Husayn ibn Ali. The memories of that age still resound loudly in the
incitements of the mullahs and Imams, and keep alive doctrinarian and
sectarian divisions been nurtured for centuries. "Tantum potuit religio
suadere malorum" sang Lucretius Caro one Century B.C.
11The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
Over the past year, starting with the 2013 United Nations General
Assembly and the telephone call between Presidents Obama and
Rouhani, the Us has been trying to engineer an acceptable way to bring
in Iran from the cold, and to transform the region by elevating Iranian
influence in a constructive, non-confrontational fashion. The Obama
Administration has been led by popular mood until last August. The
opinion polls did show until then a clear reluctance of Americans to
engage armed forces abroad.
12The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
More recently, the gruesome images of James Folly and Steven Sotlof
fbeing beheaded have suddenly reversed the trend. Even if some of the
weariness about sending boothson on the ground remains, Washington
has been transformed from the capital of a reluctant super power in to
the cheerleader- as somebody said- for recommitting the US military into
another potentially intractable conflict in Iraq and Syria. The shifting
sense of American politics are all on theese figures: in November 2013,
51% of Americans (Pew research) thought that the country was doing to
much to solve global problems. Last September figure dropped to 39%,
while those who believe that the US is doing to little surged from 17 to
31%. About two thirds of Americans support air strikes against ISIS.
Combination of Ukraine and ISIS have created a spring time for neo
conservatives. There is a new environment in a Congress only one year
ago the option of bombing Bashir Al Assad in Syria was rebuffed to great
disarray of the Free Syrian Army. Now the US Congress is giving a green
light to operations against ISIS and Syria as well as to the funding the so
cold “moderate Syrian rebels”.
13The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
The main question still lays on the overall approach to Iran. Has the
regime changed its basic posture since Rouhani election? Is the nuclear
agreement considered in Washington and in Brussels a sufficient
evidence that Teheran will became a constructive partner in the other
most difficult regional issues? Or should Washington re-focused it’s
priorities, as suggested by the Israeli Prime Minister?
The Administration still hopes that a working relationship with Iran means
sway over the action Assad and Hezbollah, and facilitate a decent
outcome in Iraq.
But how does the Us Administration hope progress with Iran would
impact on efforts to resolve the Syrian conflict? "Well, I don't know. I
mean, honestly, I don’t think anybody has any idea "was a few months
ago the candid answer of an Us official to Paul Dahanar recorded in his
book on the New Middle East.
14The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
"One step at a time" is a remark repeatedly made by Secretary Kerry. Is
the West making up its policy in the Middle East as it goes along? Or is
this a case of American and European pragmatism versus Islamic
millenarism?
On both sides of the Atlantic, the definition of a solid and coherent
strategy remains dangerously unaccomplished .Secretaries Clinton and
Gates on one side, and President Obama on the other were clearly on a
different footing when the White House did object to a decisive support
to the Syrian National Coalition during the second half of 2012.
In February 2013 I hosted in Rome a ministerial meeting of the core
group of the friends of the Syrian Nation Coalition, encouraged by
Washington in order to provide a more effective support to moderate
opposition groups. The decisions taken on that occasion unfortunately
didn’t follow trough.
15The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
The debate weather that would have closed the doors to Al Nousra and
to Isis in Syria, and now in Iraq, is still on-going. In Europe, even under
the extremely dramatic circumstances of a possible genocide, there is
still no clear, common vision. The green light the Eu Foreign ministers
gave, last August 15,to Member States which are willing to arm the
Kurdish Regional Government is an important precedent for the EU
members wich have always objected to provide military support without
a proper UNSC authorization. Still, the EU Council decision seems a far
cry from a true Eu political and security strategy in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon,
Yemen and especially Iran.
16The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
The important deliberations taken by the Cardiff Nato summit and the
subsequent initiative “for a coalition of the willing” against ISIS and the
important conference held in Paris last week may well serve the purpose
declared by President Obama in September 10th: to degrade and
ultimately destroy ISIS militarily, financially, and ideologically, gaining
legitimacy by virtue of it’s Arab and Muslim backers and restoring the
credibility of the American power. While coalescing the Sunni Arab states
against the “cancer” spread by the Islamic states in the Sunni world this
strategy still appears to narrowly designed:
17The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
– first because the need to sanitize western and Arab attacks against
the Islamic State from any cooperation with Assad and with Iran is
not sufficiently understood in our Countries;
– second, because it is all but evident how this war against the Islamic
State will benefit western and Sunni Arab security interests instead of
a further empowerment of Iran and Shia factions;
– third, because the lukewarm reactions of the Sunni Arab countries
show that this strategy is not gaining yet the hearts and minds of the
population where the conflict between Sunni and Shia is more acute.
Jean Marie Guehenno was right when he underlind has he did in the
N.Y.T that support to the rebels in the greater Aleppo should have
been immediately increased, and that Saudi Arabia, Qatar and
Turkey should have coordinated incentives and conditions for the
different factions in the field.
– If the birth of the "Islamic State" in Syria has been encouraged by the
absence of timely prevention, the "Islamic State" is coming of age
also in Iraq after years of sectarian behaviour by the Maliki
Government, and its observance of diktats imposed by Iran.
18The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
In the Iraqi political scene, Teheran has a wide control of all Shia
factions: that is true for Al Maliki's Dawa, as for the nationalists of
Moqtada Al-Sadr, for Abdel Aziz Al-Hakim Supreme Council of Islamic
Revolution in Irak (SCIRI),as for the radicals of Asaib Ahl-Al Haq. Until
last 12 August no pressure from Washington or European Capital has
had any effect on Al-Maliki stubbornness to stay in power. But on that
day a short press release from Teheran which endorsed Haidar Al – Abidi
was enough to convince Al Maliki to give in to the Iranian expectations.
Does the appointment of the new iraqi PM, welcomed also by western
capitals, really mean that Iran is opening up to compromise, under the
threat of a Sunni Caliphate in Irak and Syria? The measure by which the
Iranians have been helping militarly Baghdad indicates their true
priorities. The iranians have invested heavily in Syria, in Lebanon, in
Iraq, in the Gulf. Their priority is to strengthen the Shia foothold in the
entire region. Al-Abidi may represent a signal in a different direction. But
he must be tested very carefully.
19The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
The new “unity cabinet” is fragile and contains only token Sunni
representation. The Interior and Defence Minister, two portfolios that Al
Maliki kept for himself in order to reinforce the Shia control over the
security apparatus have been strongly reclaimed by Teheran.
For that reason the two position where not immediately assigned. Iraq
will survive as a State only if Teheran and its Shia proxies will allow
Sunnis and Kurds to gain real influence in governing the country.
In order to get rid of Isis the Sunni tribes and the former Ba’athist groups
must be convinced again that people in Baghdad are trustworthy and not
enemies. That is extremely difficult. Over the last five years Sunnis have
only gone trough total disillusionment and disenfranchisement. After
having fought hard in western ad central Iraq to chase in 2007 an 2008
Al Qaeda and other terrorist organisations, the Sunni tribes have again
been terrorised and pressured. The prerogatives granted to them by the
Constitution have been sistematically overlooked.
20The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
It will be equally difficult for them to repeat a second time the
"Awakening" against terrorist groups, without knowing for sure that the
Sunni’s can be masters of their own destiny. Along the same line the
story goes for the Kurds.
The Eu-Us military involvement in protecting the Kurd Regional
Government from the IS, needs to be matched with a firm understanding
with Iran on two points:
- that the Iraqi constitution must be immediately implemented;
- the era of one party-Shia domination is over.
21The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
Otherwise, as Gen. Petraeus famously put it, in the name of keeping Iraq
together the US air force would have act on behalf of the Shia militias.
Let’s be honest: Western interventions have strengthened Shia factions
in Iraq already three times: in 1991, in 2003 and in 2007. The last two
interventions have considerably empowered Shia Factions in the region,
encouraging later on the Iranian support to Assad and the consequent
rise of the Islamic State in Syria and in Iraq.
It would be a mistake to believe that the military eradication of the IS
could, by itself, mitigate the Iranian appetite and wipe away the roots of
the Sunni Shia divide.
22The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
*THE ISLAMIC STATE (IS)
Although IS gives us the image of eighth century marauders executing
non belivers, buring alive women and children, pillaging at will, the
organization is sofisticated, financially savy, and has build a structure
which may survive for years. Traditional counterterrorism methods to
target the Islamic State wealth can only have little effect, given that most
of its money is raised and spent inside Iraq and Syria. It has for a long
time. Like many revolutionary movements and insurgents around the
world, the IS has raised funds trough threaths, coercion and cooptation.
Documents captured by Us forces in Iraq since 2005 show that IS is
financially self sustained and doesn't rely on fereign patrons; contrary to
what Al Qaeda always did, the IS has kept meticulous records of its
"revenues". they show racket, extortions, oil trade, blackmail of religious
communities and minorities, kidnapping for ramson.
23The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
The Islamic State is the offspring of various Qaedist and tribal forces
which have been regrouping under benevolent eyes of Bashir Assad in
Syria. They have achieved impressive military results since last spring in
Syria, against other much less organized rebel groups, and in Iraq. Iraq
is where Isis has bet all its cards since last June.
Al Baghdadi has engaged in a struggle against a current Al Qaeda
leader, Ayman Al Zawhairi, a struggle which has even led to the
assassination last february of Abou Khaled Al Souri, tasked by Al
Zawahiri to mediate.
Contemporary political Islam has certainly broken with its secular
tradition of being a force of unification of Arab tribes and fragmentation of
Sunni Jihadism has alwayas existed. In Irak, Abou Moussab Al Zarkawui
kept his distance from Bin Laden. In Syria Mohammad Al Joulani, head
of Al Nousra,has been competing with Isis until recently. If it is therefore
true, as Vicken Cheterian wrote in Le Monde Diplomatique, that the
sectarian confrontation proves the political and economic disintegration
of the Muslim society in Irak, and Syria. Confessional motives should'nt
therefore overestimated. But the Sunni-Shia clash is becoming more
evident by the day.
24The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
Beyond the military support provided by President Obama and some
Europeans, an effective strategy needs to align local population against
the IS.
A. That means in Iraq a radical switch from the current Shia rule to a
new unity Government which empowers at the national level Sunnis
an Kurds, decentralize the whole structure of government, distributes
large portions of the national budget to Sunni-majority areas,
provides economic assistance and subsidies to local sunni
communities that feel now attracted by the IS.
25The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
B. Us and Eu should engage with a new Iraqi government on a different
level then before, when Al Maliki doublegames, ambiguities and
complete dependence from Teheran led to disaster. Security
arrangements, political inclusiveness, respect of previous
commitments- human rights come fully into the picture- must be the
"lode star", if western Countries effort in Iraq has any sense. A shared
strategy with the new Government should aim at key priorities: to
contain and possibly reverse the IS expansion in Iraq and
consequently in Syria: to dry up its financial resources; to displace IS
from oil wells in northern Iraq and impede refinement at facilities in
Eastern Syria.
26The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
C. a new Iraqi government should also commit to go off on a fresh tack
in its relations with the Assad regime. Western support shouldn't have
been granted in absence of this key step. It would be wise for the EU
to seriously adress this issue, the sooner the better. Al Maliki involved
Baghad in the syrian civil war sitting side by side with Assad,
channeling iranian military aid, and making Iraq an even more
obvious field of operations for Isis. To go off on a fresh tack implies
also a very different Iraqi approach vis a vis Turkey, Jordan and the
Syrian Kurds: not only in terms of control of oil wells and refineries,
but also with a broader view of government decentralization and local
security structures. It would seem unreasonable to pretend that a
national Iraqi Army largely directed and organised by iranian
advisers, staffed and led almost exclusively by Shia servicemen and
officers, constantly "helped" by Shia militias specialized in sectarian
"dirty jobs", may be perceived and trusted by Sunnis and Kurds as a
guarantee for their own security and for the peaceful future of a
united Iraq.
27The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
D. a gradually more independent, secure, well armed Iraqi Kurdistan,
connected to the Syrian Kurdistan, should emerge as the common
national interest for the regional stability: as the main actor against
the IS; as a driver for economic development; as a moderate Sunni,
secular political force in the Iraqi-Syrian disintegration, ready to save
refugees and religious minorities. The innovative approach of PM
Erdogan to the kurdish question over the last year gives to EU and
US this vital opportunity to take in the relationship with Ankara.
28The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
*THE IRAQI FUTURE
The debate on a possible "Three State solution" splintering the Shiite,
Sunni and Kurdish region started just a few months after G.W. Bush's
declaration "Mission accomplished". The vision prevailed that such a
solution would have immediately ignited slaughters and ethnic cleansing,
even worse than those which had happened in Bosnia, given the stakes
in Iraq: mixed families, different communities living side by side in the
same urban and social context; uneven distribution of natural resources,
above all water and oil; past histories of killing and revenge; interference
by external players.
According to some views, a loose federation could represent a
compromise. On the other hand to remain united and to be convinced
the this was the best option the different factions should be given strong
incentives, in term of power sharing, equitable access to common
resources and revenues, security guarantees. The formula enshrined in
the 2005 Constitution was, therefore, federalism with decentralization of
power to the regions and limited role for a central government tasked
essentially with controlling defence, foreign affairs and equitable
distribution of wealth.
29The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
The Al-Maliki efforts have gone in the opposite direction. He has
constantly challenged an honest decentralization, sought absolute power
for the Shiites, build up a complete integration with Iran strategies.
A full implementation of 2005 Iraq Constitution should lead to a
"containment “of the Iranian expansionary policies in Iraq and Syria, and
to some correction of the Shia power in both countries. Teheran may
have learned from the latest developments that a direct clash with Sunni
fundamentalism is a lose- lose situation and would undermine the
Iranian position in the whole region. It may therefore be the right time to
address the Kurdish issue trough a swift implementation of Art. 140 of
the Constitution (census plus referendum in the contested
territories),and recognition de facto of more self governing powers to the
Sunni regions.
30The clash between Sunni and Shia in an unsettled Middle East
All this requires a well coordinated foreign and security agenda among
Europeans and Americans. Efforts with all main Iraqi factions, with turks,
russians, Arab League members, and, finally, the Iranians must be
closely planned and executed. The challenge is much wider than an anti
terrorist action against the IS. The Iraqi and Syrian crises cannot be dealt
with in a piecemeal approach if we recognize a strong national interest in
defusing a furtherance of Sunni-Shia clash which is already affecting our
security.