Required Reading: Iraq and Gulf Analysis

I’ve just come across a blog called Iraq and Gulf Analysis written by Reidar Visser who maintains the always excellent Historiae.org site on Basra and southern Iraq. As opposed to the longer essays on Historiae, this blog contains short analytical pieces and Visser’s archive of notes on Iraq from the last few years. Here’s a snip from his recent obit of Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, the late leader of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI):

Throughout the post-war period, Hakim masterfully managed to balance US and Iranian pressures and was successful in creating the impression in Washington that SCIRI was on course to liberate itself from Iranian overlordship. This involved theatrics such as a name change in May 2007, where SCIRI became ISCI (without the “revolution”) and where the rumour was circulated (but never officially confirmed) that ISCI would henceforth take its orders from the Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani in Najaf in Iraq, instead of from Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei. Simultaneously, Hakim, who himself was never an Islamic scholar of repute, managed to create the impression of religious authority among Americans by focusing on his status as the son of a Shiite luminary (the Grand Ayatollah Muhsin al-Hakim) and as a sayyid (descendant of the Prophet), thereby prompting many international journalists to describe him as a “leading cleric” and one of the most “powerful” politicians of Iraq. It was only gradually since 2008 – and more pronouncedly since the local elections in January 2009 – that the idea of ISCI as a loyal ally of Iran returned to US policy-making circles in earnest.

-WW

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