Arab angst over Shi'ite power underpins Iraq position

Tue Apr 22, 2008 6:41pm EDT
 
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By Andrew Hammond - Analysis

RIYADH (Reuters) - Ever since the fall of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein in 2003, Sunni Arab countries have had trouble adjusting to the emergence of a powerful Shi'ite-led Iraq.

Sunni Arab governments have held back from establishing full diplomatic ties with Baghdad, citing security concerns, the continued reliance of the government on large numbers of foreign troops and extensive influence from neighboring Iran.

No ambassador from any Sunni Arab nation has been stationed permanently in Baghdad since Egypt's envoy was kidnapped and killed in 2005, and Iraqi and U.S. politicians hammered at the issue at a regional meeting in Kuwait this week.

Iraq was once a major player in the Arab political firmament, receiving Gulf Arab funding for its 1980-88 war against Iran in a pan-Arab effort to stem the influence of non-Arab Shi'ite Muslim power Iran after its revolution of 1979.

But with Shi'ite clerics and politicians dominating the scene after the U.S.-led invasion of 2003, leaders such as Egypt's Hosni Mubarak and Jordan's King Abdallah have expressed views revealing a fear that Iraq was no longer part of the club.

"There is a new regional scene and a fear for the future of Sunni political hegemony as a Shi'ite camp forms with the Shi'ite ascendance in Iraq," said Fouad Ibrahim, a Saudi author of a study on Saudi Arabia's Shi'ite minority.

"Most Arab governments are not willing to see Shi'ite domination. They would accept Shi'ite participation but not domination of Iraq," said Mohamed el-Sayed Said, Egyptian political scientist and editor of al-Badil newspaper.

Diplomats in Riyadh say Saudi Arabia, which considers itself the leading representative of mainstream Sunni Islam, decided last year to reduce its dealings with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki after concluding he was running a Shi'ite sectarian government too close to Iran.  Continued...

 

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