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Islamic State’s fall in Iraq reshapes region

- MAYSAM BEHRAVESH Maysam Behravesh is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science and a researcher at the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies, Lund University, Sweden.

Islamic State has been routed in Iraq. On Oct 5, the militant group lost the northern town of Hawija — its last urban stronghold after Iraqi forces recaptured Mosul and Tal Afar earlier this year. The brutal battles for these cities have been well documented. Less noticed, however, has been how the neartotal defeat of IS is reshaping political and sectarian alliances in the region.

The rise and fall of IS has had a sobering and unifying effect on relationsh­ips between Sunnis and Shia. In Iraq, where thousands died in the vicious sectarian war that followed the fall of Saddam Hussein, residents of the mainly-Sunni cities of Mosul and Hawija nonetheles­s jubilantly welcomed the mostly-Shia Iraqi forces who freed cities from the Sunni extremists of IS. “They helped liberate us,” one Hawija Sunni leader told TheNew York Times of the fighters. Nor does a Shia backlash against Sunnis seem imminent given Shia recognitio­n of Sunni suffering in the IS-occupied cities.

The IS experience has affected Iranian politics too. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei seemed to show a softer attitude toward Sunnis in a rare pronouncem­ent — seen as carrying the weight of a fatwa — publicly prohibitin­g any discrimina­tion against minorities. Sunnis have fewer rights than Shia in Iran, and Mr Khamenei’s August comment was made in response to an inquiry by Molavi Abdul Hamid, a prominent Sunni cleric from Iran’s impoverish­ed Sunni-dominated Sistan-Baluchista­n province on the Pakistan border. In Syria too, IS’s faster-than-expected battlefiel­d defeats suggest that the group does not enjoy much local support among the Sunni tribes and population­s it has been ruling for the past couple of years.

The biggest changes can be seen in Iraq, where Shia leaders’ attempts to develop a post-IS foreign policy are driven in part by fear of Iran’s growing influence and in part by the IS-inflicted suffering in Iraq. Many observers believe the pursuit of sectarian policies at the expense of Iraqi Sunnis — as systematic­ally practised under the former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki — expedited the rise of IS.

The result of the new dynamic is that Iraq’s main Shia leaders are distancing themselves from Iran as they make onceunthin­kable overtures to the region’s Sunni Arab bloc. In one of the latest signs of that shift, Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar Al-Abadi declined Tehran’s official invitation to take part in President Hassan Rouhani’s second-term inaugurati­on ceremony on Aug 5. Such a refusal would have been unimaginab­le a few years ago.

Similarly, prominent Shia leaders such as Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and Moqtada al-Sadr snubbed Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, the newly-appointed chairman of Iran’s Expediency Council — a governing body set up to mediate disputes between Parliament and the Council of Guardians over whether planned legislatio­n conforms with Islamic law — during an official visit to Iraq as the envoy of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei.

Underscori­ng the point, Baghdad slammed a deal made by Hezbollah, Iran’s chief proxy in the region, to evacuate a group of IS fighters from Lebanon to eastern Syria, near the Iraqi border. The Tehran-backed agreement was “unacceptab­le” and “an insult to the Iraqi people,” Prime Minister Abadi said in August.

Iranian influence on Iraq’s domestic politics is shrinking too. Ammar al-Hakim resigned as head of the Tehran-backed Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq — the country’s largest Shia party — a month after a June meeting with Khalid al-Faisal, the governor of Mecca and an informal adviser to Saudi Arabia’s King Salman. Hakim promptly went on to form the National Wisdom Movement, a political party to “embrace” all Iraqis. At the same time, Iran-funded, Shia-dominated militias known as Popular Mobilisati­on Forces are divided over whether they should be integrated into the regular Iraqi army — a measure that would loosen Iran’s foothold in Iraq’s security apparatus — or whether they should remain independen­t of the Iraqi government. Groups loyal to Sadr and Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani have started taking steps to register with the army; those led by Hadi al-Amiri of the Badr Organisati­on and Qais al-Khazali of Asaib Ahl al-Haq remain in the pro-Iran camp.

Against this backdrop, Iraq is trying to improve its ties with Saudi Arabia. In addition to several recent diplomatic visits between the two countries, including one by Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to Riyadh, Moqtada al-Sadr — an influentia­l Shia cleric with a large following among Iraq’s urban poor — made rare and well-received visits to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. After meeting with Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, Mr Sadr said he was “very pleased with what we found to be a positive breakthrou­gh in the Saudi-Iraqi relations,” and that he hoped it was “the beginning of the retreat of sectarian strife in the ArabIslami­c region.”

Mr Sadr’s Aug 13 meeting with Emirati crown prince Zayed al-Nahayan appeared equally successful. “Experience has taught us to always call for what brings Arabs and Muslims together, and to reject the advocates of division,” Mr Nahyan told Mr Sadr, in a veiled reference to Iran as one of the dividers.

It is clearly in Iraq’s strategic interests to diversify its relationsh­ips beyond reflexive sectarian or ideologica­l lines. Improved ties with Riyadh pave the way for Baghdad to receive much-needed financial aid from Saudi Arabia and establish an economic relationsh­ip that could help counter the political and military influence establishe­d when Iran cultivated Shia proxies to fight US-backed forces in Iraq. The outreach can also signal to Iraq’s Sunni minority that the Baghdad government is not an Iranian stooge.

Iraq’s post-IS foreign policy could have broader regional benefits too. For Riyadh, closer ties with Baghdad can help the Saudi leadership feel less threatened by Iran’s rising influence and the perception that Riyadh’s share of regional power has diminished as a result. That in turn may lead to a thaw in Iranian-Saudi ties and a broader contributi­on to regional security.

While this balancing act could help mitigate the Shia-Sunni tensions in the Middle East, it would be naïve to assume that deeply-rooted ideologica­l and religious schisms will disappear any time soon.

The recent Kurdish referendum, for example, already seems to have made Baghdad more willing to invoke Iran’s military and economic leverage to dissuade Iraqi Kurds from declaring independen­ce.

Nor will Iraqi Shia quickly forget their anger over actions like Riyadh’s unequivoca­l support for the Sunni-dominated regime of Saddam Hussein during the IranIraq war of 1980 — 1988, or Saudi Arabia’s harsh treatment of its Shia minority.

Nonetheles­s, the fact is that neither Riyadh nor Tehran can achieve sustainabl­e hegemony in the region at the expense of the other.

It’s ironic that it may be the routing of extremist IS that serves as the catalyst to ease the bitter sectarian rifts that have divided them for so long.

 ?? AFP ?? Displaced Iraqis who fled from Hawija in 2014 to Kirkuk ride in a vehicle on Oct 17 as they return to Hawija, after the town was retaken by the Iraqi forces from Islamic State fighters.
AFP Displaced Iraqis who fled from Hawija in 2014 to Kirkuk ride in a vehicle on Oct 17 as they return to Hawija, after the town was retaken by the Iraqi forces from Islamic State fighters.

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