Tim Collins, FirstPost.co.uk
Moqtada is potentially a force who could reconcile Sunni, Kurd
and Shia.
But he certainly exudes messianic charisma and is undoubtedly
a focus for the anger as well as the hope of his people. Patrick Cockburn, in
his new book Moqtada al-Sadr and the Fall of Iraq, describes him as 'riding
a tiger', and I believe he has got it spot on. But among the 'tiger jockeys' we
have seen in the last half-century, there have been few as naturally talented
as Moqtada.
I have spent a total of nearly a year in Iraq since the
invasion as variously soldier, writer and advisor and can relate wholly to the
account laid out in this book. The disastrous misjudgements that characterised
the Bremer era have had, and will continue to have, long-standing and miserable
effects.
Meantime, from the chaos of this benighted country have
emerged a number of key leaders from the constituent communities of Iraq.
From the Kurds has come Jalal Talabani, who is perhaps the
most effective and
respected politician in the land at present; from While Talabani is undoubtedly a force for good and Among the Sunnis of Iraq and among his Shia rivals, Moqtada is in fact a shrewd leader, manipulator and politician On this, Cockburn's book is invaluable: it reveals one of Moqtada is in fact the leader of a section of the Iraqi Of course there is Iranian influence - how could there not be? Instead of appreciating this, the Bremer regime rejected I take the view that Moqtada al-Sadr, like Gerry Adams in Ireland, is For here is the great conundrum; who and what is Moqtada |