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View Full Version : Iraq's rebel cleric gains surge in popularity



MetalBoy
05-19-2004, 10:00 PM
****, we should have wasted this ****er when we had the chance, when he was still seen as a fringe player by most Iraqis. This is what handwringing and inaction accomplishes. And this poll was taken before the prison scandal. ****.



Iraq's rebel cleric gains surge in popularity
By Roula Khalaf in Baghdad
Published: May 19 2004 21:49 | Last Updated: May 19 2004 21:49
Financial Times

An Iraqi poll to be released next week shows a surge in the popularity of Moqtada al-Sadr, the radical young Shia cleric fighting coalition forces, and suggests nearly nine out of 10 Iraqis see US troops as occupiers and not liberators or peacekeepers.

The poll was conducted by the one-year-old Iraq Center for Research and Strategic Studies, which is considered reliable enough for the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority to have submitted questions to be included in the study.

Although the results of any poll in Iraq's traumatised society should be taken with caution, the survey highlights the difficulties facing the US authorities in Baghdad as they confront Mr Sadr, who launched an insurgency against the US-led occupation last month.


Conducted before the Abu Ghraib prisoners' scandal, it also suggests a severe erosion of American credibility even before Iraqis were confronted with images of torture at the hands of US soldiers.

Saadoun Duleimi, head of the centre, said more than half of a representative sample - comprising 1,600 Shia, Sunni Arabs and Kurds polled in all Iraq's main regions - wanted coalition troops to leave Iraq. This compares with about 20 per cent in an October survey. Some 88 per cent of respondents said they now regarded coalition forces in Iraq as occupiers.

"Iraqis always contrast American actions with American promises and there's now a wide gap in credibility," said Mr Duleimi, who belongs to one of the country's big Sunni tribes. "In this climate, fighting has given Moqtada credibility because he's the only Iraqi man who stood up against the occupation forces."

The US authorities in Baghdad face an uphill battle to persuade Iraqis that the transfer of sovereignty on June 30 will mark the end of the US occupation. The removal of US troops was cited in the poll as a more urgent issue than the country's formal status.

Respondents saw Mr Sadr as Iraq's second most influential figure after Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the country's most senior Shia cleric. Some 32 per cent of respondents said they strongly supported Mr Sadr and another 36 per cent somewhat supported him.

Ibrahim Jaafari, head of the Shia Islamist Daawa party and a member of the governing council, came next on the list of influential Iraqis. Among council members, Adnan Pachachi, the Sunni former foreign minister, came some distance behind Mr Jaafari. Mr Pachachi is regarded as the apparent favourite for the ceremonial post of president when a caretaker government takes over.

talib_killa34
05-19-2004, 10:33 PM
Their country can go to shambles once we leave.

This all wrought with their own hands. :(

DPGLAW
05-19-2004, 10:58 PM
I can't get the image I wanted to post, as you can see it didn't work. Someone please tell me how to post pictures so that they work....I looked the the FAQS and did noy see how

DPGLAW
05-19-2004, 11:01 PM
We should of wasted this morther****i** raghead when we had the chance, he's worthlesss.....
We should put this sign up in front of his house, then he stops tc read it, BANG!!!

file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Owner/Desktop/Digital%20Pictures/SniperSign.jpg

Brozozo
05-19-2004, 11:05 PM
go somewhere like www.imageshack.us and upload your photos there, it will automatically give you a link to post on forums.

You can't link photos directly to your hard disk

American Patriot
05-19-2004, 11:06 PM
You can't link files from your hard-drive.

www.imagebucket.com is a free pic upload site, I think.

Brozozo
05-19-2004, 11:07 PM
Ha, beat you to it AP! :P

American Patriot
05-19-2004, 11:10 PM
rofl

Sergei
05-20-2004, 02:59 AM
Mods, why don't you lock this "intelligent" discussion?

OB Kenobi
05-20-2004, 03:47 AM
f***, we should have wasted this f*** when we had the chance, when he was still seen as a fringe player by most Iraqis.

The ironic thing is that he wouldn't even be in the country if Saddam was still around. Saddam killed his father and didn't allow any of this Islamic militancy.

Why would the Shiites suddenly change their mind now? What was Bush thinking?! They look at this as an opportunity to seize power from the Baathists, not as a liberation. And don't think that Sistani and Iran aren't in on it, they're using Sadr as a scapegoat so they can't be blamed.

That's actually alot how Bin Laden was used, isn't it?

I get the feeling Sadr will be killed at some point anyway. Not necessarily by US troops, but by the Baathists/Sunnis who can gain access to him, or maybe even by the Shiites if he loses his value.