Despite all the high profile
(to attract the attention of local and foreign media) terror attacks in
the last few months, 2011 terrorism related deaths were down 27 percent
from 2010. This was a continuation of the decline from the 2007 peak of
18,000 deaths. Last month had the lowest death toll (155) since 2003.
While the Sunni Arab terror groups are being beaten, as long they can
still carry out their attacks, which mainly kill civilians, the entire
Sunni Arab community will keep feeling the hate. In response, some Sunni
Arab politicians are demanding an autonomous Sunni Arab state,
extending from Baghdad (parts of which are still exclusively Sunni)
north to Kurdish territory and west to the Jordanian border.
Unfortunately, this idea has little support in the Sunni community
because this autonomous Sunni Arab area has almost no oil. At the same
time, the Kurds are allowing foreign firms to develop oil fields in
areas the Kurds have controlled for two decades. This annoys the Shia
dominated Iraq government, but there is no enthusiasm for invading the
Kurdish north. The Shia can take comfort in the fact that they still
control most Iraqi oil. It's the oil, and billions in oil revenue which
occupies the attention of most Iraqis. Given the continued (since
Saddam's rule) corruption and inept government, Iraqis have more to be
upset about than a few terrorist bombings. If the corruption could be
reduced, wiping out the terrorists would happen a lot more quickly.
And then there is the popular rebellion next door in Syria.
There is not much sympathy for Syrians, who prospered by hosting Iraqi
exiles after 2003, and tolerated these exiles shipping cash, weapons and
terrorists into Iraq. For the moment, the Iraqis are keeping Iranian
meddling to a minimum by supporting the pro-Iran dictatorship in Syria.
The Iraqis are not particularly enthusiastic about this support, but it
is enough to keep Iran from messing with Iraqi politics.
January 11, 2012: A gun battle erupted outside the compound
of the Chaldean Catholic Archbishop of Kirkuk. Two attackers were killed
and one wounded and captured. Five policemen were wounded. It's unclear
if the archbishop (who was not harmed) was the target of the attack, or
a member of parliament, who lived nearby.
Two the south, other Sunni terrorist violence left five
policemen and a town major dead.
In Iran, yet another scientist working on nuclear weapons
was killed. Apparently, Israeli Mossad (their CIA) agents have been
recruiting Iranian Kurds, who have fled to northern (Kurdish controlled)
Iraq and formed an intelligence and assassination network in Iran.
Israel has long been an ally of the Iranian Kurds, who shared a hatred
of Saddam Hussein. Because of that support (which has included military
equipment and advisors), Israel has been given a lot of latitude in
setting up espionage operations, especially against Iran. Kurds have
long had a hostile relationship with Iran, and supporting Mossad terror
attacks inside Iran will, for the Kurds, not make things much worse.
In the last few days, a series of terror attacks against
Iraqi and visiting Iranian Shia left about a hundred dead and several
hundred wounded. These attacks are the work of Sunni Arab terrorist
organization. Some are doing it for religious reasons (like al Qaeda),
while others are simply trying to create chaos which, it is believed
would enable the Sunni Arabs to seized control of the government again.
But this time the Shia are fully aware of how the Sunni Arabs have used
various terrorist and political techniques to rule the Shia majority,
and are determined to see that this does not happen again. Meanwhile,
more mainstream Sunni politicians are demanding more money and power.
But the Shia majority is refusing to share until the Sunni community
does more to halt the Sunni Arab terrorism. The Iraqi Kurds are siding
with the Sunni Arabs, if only to limit the influence of Iran. But the
continued Sunni Arab terror attacks have increased general distrust of
Sunni Arabs, and there is again pressure on Sunni Arabs to leave mixed
(with Shia, Kurds and others) neighborhoods.
January 6, 2012: One of the largest remaining pro-Iran Shia
militias (Asaib Ahl al-Haq) is accepting amnesty and disarming. This
group also made many attacks against American troops. The group will now
become a political party.
January 3, 2012: Police arrested 21 Sunni terrorism suspects
believed involved in several recent bombing attacks.
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