The dynamics of the situation are changing pretty rapidly.
The primary religious bigwig of Shia Iraq, who holds a huge amount of influence in public opinion, Grand Ayatollah Sistani has come out in strong opposition to the decidedly undemocratic character of the provisional assembly to be created next year (the only people who get to vote are tribal leaders and other local powerbrokers). He's almost forced the occupation authority into backtracking on the election plan. He's given the occupation authority about a year for significant steps towards democracy till he'll advocate any rash resistance. A good summary of the Sistanti situation:
Sistani's main rival, the hothead cleric al-Sadr (son of the murdered former Grand Ayatollah), has been characteristically stirring up a ruckus with this ammo. He's more of the Iranian-style Shia Islamist. His milita (which BTW, we just had the bright idea to use as a paramilitary force
) was even trained by Iran. And there have been clashes intermittently between the Sadrists and the occupation authorities these past months. In fact, in East Baghdad (Sadr country), there was a large demonstration a couple days ago regarding a cleric supposedly killed by a US tank.
But anyways, several day's ago he's threatened a general strike to occur in a few months - to coincide with the anniversary of his father's death. And with his large amount of support (much less than Sistani, but still it's estimated about ~1/3 of the Shia) could very easily cripple large parts of Iraq.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...-2003Dec5.html .
It'll be interesting how this all plays out. Probably not pretty, but interesting.
The primary religious bigwig of Shia Iraq, who holds a huge amount of influence in public opinion, Grand Ayatollah Sistani has come out in strong opposition to the decidedly undemocratic character of the provisional assembly to be created next year (the only people who get to vote are tribal leaders and other local powerbrokers). He's almost forced the occupation authority into backtracking on the election plan. He's given the occupation authority about a year for significant steps towards democracy till he'll advocate any rash resistance. A good summary of the Sistanti situation:
Sistani's main rival, the hothead cleric al-Sadr (son of the murdered former Grand Ayatollah), has been characteristically stirring up a ruckus with this ammo. He's more of the Iranian-style Shia Islamist. His milita (which BTW, we just had the bright idea to use as a paramilitary force

But anyways, several day's ago he's threatened a general strike to occur in a few months - to coincide with the anniversary of his father's death. And with his large amount of support (much less than Sistani, but still it's estimated about ~1/3 of the Shia) could very easily cripple large parts of Iraq.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...-2003Dec5.html .
It'll be interesting how this all plays out. Probably not pretty, but interesting.
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