December 30, 2017
KNOWING YOUR ALLIES:
A 'martyr' sniper, who once fought against Israel, now a saint to Iraq's Shiites (HAMZA HENDAWI and SINAN SALAHEDDIN, 12/30/17, AP)
In his martyrdom, he has virtually become a new saint for Iraq's Shiites. His poster adorns shop windows, men and women wear his image as badges. Poems praise his valor. His sniper's rifle, with which he's said to have killed nearly 400 Islamic State group terrorists, is now enshrined in a museum in the holiest Shiite city.Ali Jayad al-Salhi, an expert sniper in his early 60s and veteran of multiple wars, was killed in September in clashes with IS in northern Iraq. He was subsequently vaulted into legend. Shiites around Iraq trade stories of how, out of piety, he left his home, wife, 10 children and 20 grandchildren to join a Shiite militia to fight in what he saw as a war between humanity and evil.Al-Salhi is a powerful symbol in the religious, near messianic mystique that has grown up around Iraq's Shiite militias in tandem with their increasing political and military might after they helped defeat the Islamic State group. Known as the "Popular Mobilization Forces" or "Hashed" in Arabic, the militias have emerged from the war with the image of an almost holy force protecting the Shiite Muslim majority.
Posted by Orrin Judd at December 30, 2017 10:05 AM
