December 15, 2007

THE GREAT WAR OF SHI'A LIBERATION:

Iraqi city poised to become hub of Shiite power (Alissa J. Rubin, December 15, 2007, IHT)

A millennium after Najaf first became a magnet for Shiite pilgrims, leaders here are reimagining this city, long suppressed by Saddam Hussein, as a new hub of Shiite political and economic power, not only for Iraq but for the entire Middle East.

That shift would further weaken the Iraqi central government and complete Najaf's transformation from a dusty, conservative town known mostly for its golden-domed shrine and soaring minarets into the undisputed center of a potentially semiautonomous Shiite region, with some of the country's richest oil reserves.

And although Najafis will say little about it, Iran is playing a significant role in the plan, helping to improve the city and its holy sites, especially the golden- domed shrine to Imam Ali, the figure most associated with the founding of the Shiite sect, who is said to be buried here. Money from Iran is financing some of the shrine expansion projects as well as contributing to the construction of a major electrical power-generating plant whose output will be shared between Najaf Province and its neighbor, Karbala, which is also the home of two important Shiite shrines.

"What we have tried to do is put in place a plan to allow Najaf to recover its political and strategic position in Iraq and the region, the Asharq al-Awsat, Iran and the Middle East," said Abdul Hussain Abtan, the deputy chairman of Najaf's Provincial Council, referring to the city's role historically as a center of pilgrimage and Shiite learning.


When the lights are low and Mahmoud Ahmedinejad faces his scariest thoughts, surely the most terrifying is that W is the 12th Imam?

Posted by Orrin Judd at December 15, 2007 6:35 PM
Comments

Bush Library in Najaf? (Or maybe Tehran?)

Posted by: Jim in Chicago at December 15, 2007 7:13 PM

A center of Shiite culture and learning that is not in Iranian dominated territory? One that will be in the American sphere? Excellent. A blow to Persia, a blow to the Saudis.

Posted by: Mikey [TypeKey Profile Page] at December 15, 2007 11:38 PM

Look at Shi'ite revival from another perspective, that of a true outsider--the proverbial man from Mars.

The whole spiritual jailhouse is what it is, but the Sunni mob family which has been running most of the jailhouse for most of its history is the party of the temporal ruling class. The Shia partisans have the advantage, from our outside point of view, of being the more confused enemies.

Posted by: Lou Gots at December 16, 2007 8:36 AM

The even bigger advantage is that their "confusion" is identical to ours, making them political compromisers for the same reason we are. Like Judaism an d Catholicism, theirs is a religion we can easily Reform.

Posted by: oj at December 16, 2007 9:11 AM

It's not a coincidence that the Wahhabi Ilkwan have attacked the Shia Najaf and Karbala region
three times in the last hundred years; 1803-05,
1929-1932, and 2003-2006.

Posted by: narciso at December 16, 2007 1:34 PM
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