Take a bow, Dan Senor and Roman Martinez!
Moqtada al-Sadr -- the radical cleric dubbed "The Most Dangerous Man in Iraq" by a Newsweek cover story in December 2006 -- has just unilaterally extended the ceasefire he imposed on his Mahdi Army militia last summer. And on the eve of the Iraq War's fifth anniversary, Sadr also issued a somber but dramatic statement. He not only declared that he had failed to transform Iraq, but also lamented the new debates and divisions within his own movement. Explaining his marginalization, Sadr all but confessed his growing isolation: "One hand cannot clap alone."
What happened? Over the past five years, Sadr has been one of the most persistent and insurmountable challenges for the U.S. Leveraging his family's prestige among the disaffected Shiite underclass, he asserted his power by violently intimidating rival clerics, agitating against the U.S. occupation, and using force to establish de facto control over Baghdad's Sadr City (named after his father, and home to two million Shiites on the east bank of the Tigris) and large swaths of southern Iraq.
The story of his rise, and fall, illustrates the complex relationship between security and political power that drives the fortunes of the U.S. mission in Iraq.
That was six days ago.
Comments:
Posted 03/26/2008 04:33pm with
But what about the Onion’s, “Our nightmare of peace and prosperity are over”?
Posted 03/26/2008 05:25pm with
It used to take months, years even, for reality to set in. Now, it takes less than a week to have your complete Kristol-like ignorance dispelled in a quite violent fashion. Oh well, they can probably parlay this into op-ed jobs at the Times and a regular gig on This Weak; those jobs obviously have no requirements other than talking out of one’s nether region…