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Save the date: June 21, 2003. Jamaat 
al-Muslimeen's 4th International Islamic 
Symposium. Greensboro, North Carolina.
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It's the anniversary of Allama Iqbal, Poet of the 
East. Here are a three of 
his couplets:
Apni millat pur qiyas aqwame maghrib say na kur
khas hay tarkeeb main qaum-e-rasool-e-hashmi
un ki jamiat ka hay mulk o nasab pur inhisar
quwwate mazhab say mustahkam hay jamiat tri
daman-e-deen hath say chuuta to jamiate kahan
aur jamiate hui rukhsat to millat bhi gai!
[Trans: Do not think of your community in terms of 
the nations of the West
The nation of the Messenger of the Banu Hashim of 
Arabia is distinct in its 
organization.
Their collectivity depends on country and race
Your collectivity is solidified by the power of 
religion.
If you lose hold of your faith-based life, then 
where is your collectivity?
and if your collectivity is lost, your entire 
community will be swept away!
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"ISRAEL 
IS OUT TO DESTROY 
PALESTINE 
WITH 
U.S. 
HELP"
Those are the words of Kathleen Christison who 
has just returned from 
occupied Palestine. She quoted Hanan Ashrawi that 
Israel is not just 
committing daily atrocities, it is determined to 
DISMANTLE THE ENTIRE 
PALESTINIAN NATIONAL ENTITY. With 
Bush's 
help, 
Israel is saying to the 
Palestinians: "You are at our mercy." Ms. 
Christisan said: When she went to 
Jenin, 
she broke into sobbing. It was utterly 
devastated by the 
Zionists. 
They have left nothing behind. The West Bank is 
dotted with hilltop 
Jewish 
settlements, like the fortresess of the 
crusaders. Israeli roads cut through 
Palestinian crop lands and olive trees. Soon 
there will be nothing left to 
build any kind of Palestinian state on, Ms. 
Christison concluded. [Source: 
C-Span, 
April 18, 2003. Ms. Christison resigned 
from the 
CIA 
in 1979 and for 
the last 24 years, according to herself, has been 
trying to regain her 
humanity.]
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Shia Demonstrations
in Iraq Orchestrated by U.S.:
Chalabi & Zubaydi both U.S. Men
Iran-Supported SAIRI Working with U.S. as 
Controlled "Opposition"
Murder of Al-Khui in Najaf Indicates Undercurrent 
of Inner-Shia Conflict
Viewers of U.S. TV channels are wondering 
about "anti-U.S. 
demonstrations" in Baghdad. Is this indeed a sign 
of "liberation" that people 
can demonstrate against the U.S. and be shown 
doing so on 
CNN? 
Thousands of 
Shia are flocking to Kerbala and getting 
publicity on U.S. 
media 
without any 
adverse comment about the breast beating which 
goes on in these ceremonies. 
Here's New Trend's analysis of the Shia situation 
in Iraq.
1. The great majority of Iran's Shias are 
secularized and 
nationalistic. They supported Saddam Hussain 
against the U.S. invasion.
1A. Some of these secularized elements were 
not able to fit into the 
Baath Party system. They went overseas and 
gradually started working with the 
U.S. to help overthrow their own government. 
Among them are Chalabi and 
Zubaydi (who claims to be the governor of 
Baghdad), two Shias whom the U.S. 
has brought forward to test the setting up of a 
puppet regime. They are 
probably expendable.
2. The religious Shias of Iraq were lead by 
Ayatollah al-Khui, a man of 
great learning who was also open-minded about the  
majority of the world's 
Muslims who are Sunnis. Al-Khui was also 
acknowledged as spiritual leader by 
religious Shias outside Iraq, including those in 
Pakistan 
and 
India.
3. The revolution led by Imam Khomeini in 
Iran brought a powerful rival 
to Al-Khui's leadership. The victory of the 
revolution rapidly spread 
Khomeini's influence among the world's Shia.
4. However, the Iraqi Shia still accepted 
Ayatollah al-Khui as their 
leader and under his advice, they did not accept 
Khomeini's call to rise up 
against Saddam Hussain. Even when wave after wave 
of Iranian forces attacked 
Basra, the Shias of Iraq did not rise up.Al-Khui 
did not support sectarianism 
as a political tool. He sensed that it would lead 
to the Shias being seen as 
a fifth column in Muslim countries.
5. During the Iran-Iraq conflict small 
segments of the Iraqi Shias moved 
towards the Iranian side of the equation. Saddam 
Hussain saw such moves as 
treachery and clamped down hard on this segment. 
Their leader Ayatollah Baqir 
as-Sadr is said to have been tortured and 
executed in prison, thus leading to 
the undying hostility between Iran-backed Shia 
and Saddam.
6. Iranian influence did not spread in Iraq 
owing to the refusal of 
Al-Khui to take sides and also owing to the 
arrival of large numbers of 
Iranian Shia who sought refuge in Iraq after 
facing torture and clamp downs 
in Iran following their attempts to bring down 
the Khomeini regime. [The 
largest such Iranian group is the 
Mujahideene 
Khalq Organization or MKO.]
After Al-Khui passed away, his family set 
up a foundation in England 
to carry on the non-political propagation of 
Shiaism. Over the years, they 
seem to have gotten close to the British 
government, particularly to Mr. 
Blair.
NOW WE COME TO THE EVENTS OF April 9 in the 
Imam Ali mosque in Najaf, 
Iraq.
 
It appears that the U.S. has been working with 
both Al-Khui's people as well 
as the inheritors of Baqir as-Sadr's line 
organized in a movement known as 
SAIRI (Supreme Assembly of Islamic Revolution in 
Iraq) which is backed by 
Iran.
Abdul Majid al-Khui appears to have 
come to Najaf with $3 million 
from the U.S. government. His work was to meet a 
Shia supporter of Saddam, 
Al-Karadi, and to create reconciliation between 
the Shia who had supported 
Saddam and those who had been neutral. Al-Khui's 
supporters handed out money 
for five days and finally a meeting was held in 
the Ali mosque where Al-Khui 
and the pro-Saddam cleric were both there. It 
appears that the crowd had been 
infiltrated by SAIRI's people (pro-Iran) who 
attacked the two clerics and 
hacked both of them to death.
Our analysis indicates that the U.S. is working 
on both sides of the Shia 
spectrum, be it Chalabi's people, al-Khui's 
people or Iran's SAIRI. It 
appears that the pulling down of the statues and 
the looting were all 
"permitted" by the U.S. forces to gain the 
support of Shias living in the 
"Saddam City" district of Baghdad. The looting 
was a "reward" given to the 
Shias for their cooperation with the invasion.
 
The "anti-U.S. demonstrations" are also being 
"permitted" by the U.S. to 
giving credence to a loyal "opposition" which is 
being created. Without U.S. 
"green signal", the demonstrations would have 
never made it to CNN.
There is absolutely no question of the U.S. 
permitting any real opposition. 
The Ansar al-Islam Kurds were bombed into 
eternity. The Shia exiles from 
Iran, the MKO,  were also thoroughly bombed and 
their remnants pursued. The 
Fidayeen Saddam and the mujahideen from overseas 
face death without trial or 
at least arrest and open ended imprisonment.
Iran is dreaming of a sectarian empire. 
The U.S. has its own designs 
to attach Iraq to its circle of client states. 
The Iranian-U.S. romance is on 
for now.
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One Day Iraqis will Put Saddam's Statue Back on 
its Pedestal
Liberation Deal: American Food for Iraqi Souls
Iraq has now been freed, as 
Egypt 
had been freed 
by its third defeat at 
Israeli hands in 1973..
Iqra: Iraq Is Free
By: Shahid Alam
Iqra, recite, proclaim, affirm, avow, declare: 
Iraq is free. 
Iraq has been freed from ten thousand years of 
tyranny; freed from darkest 
infamy; freed from cold villainy; freed from 
centuries of stasis; freed from 
nights of searing pain; freed from terrible 
torture; freed from sanctioned 
starvation; freed from laser-guided precision; 
freed from bombs that explode 
with shock and awe. 
The whole world was witness to this historical 
moment. They saw the dark 
head of the tyrant, the granite head of 
Ozymandias draped in the fabric of 
freedom, effaced, his sneer blotted out, his 
terror nullified, brought down 
by the force of an armor-clad Bradley vehicle. 
Iraqis, many dozens of them, 
cheered lustily. A few even kissed the liberators 
on both cheeks, in 
authentic Arab style. 
The nay-sayers, skeptics, doubting Thomases, 
Pacifists, prophets of doom, 
and the patriotically challenged were wrong about 
America's war in Iraq. The 
millions who marched in the streets, protesting 
the war, are now gnashing 
their teeth. In deep shame, penitent, they have 
announced that they will 
march again in the millions, to curse, flog, 
flagellate themselves for 
marching against the war that freed Iraqis. 
This was not a war on Iraq, much less a war 
against Iraq. It was a war in 
Iraq: a war for the Iraqis. It wasn't the first 
time that a great civilizing 
nation has fought a war in a barbarous land 
against its homegrown tyrants. 
Civilized nations have carried this burden 
uncomplainingly, showing equal 
dedication in freeing lands of their peoples and, 
when the occasion 
demanded, freeing peoples of their lands. It is 
United States now that 
carries the torch of freedom, bravely torching 
anyone who shows the gall to 
oppose the forward march of the brave and free. 
Consider the freedoms this war has bestowed on 
Iraq.
First and foremost, this war has freed Iraq of 
its WMDs. If Americans have 
not yet found any caches of WMDs inside Iraq, 
this was expected all along. 
In the days leading up to the war, the WMDs were 
smuggled into 
Syria 
for 
safe-keeping. But that only means that Americans 
will have to go the extra 
mile, into Syria. And perhaps Syria will smuggle 
them into Egypt, Egypt into 
Libya, Libya into Iran, and Iran into Sudan. Is 
this an Arab conspiracy to 
hitch a freedom ride on Bradleys and Abrams 
tanks?
Instantly, the American liberators have turned 
the Iraqis free to pillage 
their museums, strip their hospitals, plunder 
their universities, and loot 
their homes. The acutely funny Donald Rumsfeld 
explained that  "freedom's 
untidy. And free people are free to make mistakes 
and commit crimes and do 
bad things." Quickly, the Iraqis are learning 
that the gift of freedom comes 
at a price. And they are eager to prove that 
their freedom is worth the 
price they are being asked to pay. If Madeline 
Albright could sacrifice the 
lives of half a million Iraqi children for 
American security, surely the 
Iraqis too can give up their national treasures 
for a fleeting taste of 
freedom.
After years of being locked out, the war has 
freed Iraq to spread the 
welcome mat to American Corporations. For 
thirteen long years, since Gulf 
War I, American capital was not free to outbid 
Russian, French and German 
capital in developing Iraq; it was an 
unconscionable abridgement of freedom. 
Now the playing fields have been leveled. The 
Bechtels, Halliburtons, 
Northrops, Exxons, Triremes are free at last to 
claim their pound of Iraqi 
flesh.
The liberation of Iraq is being unctuously 
greeted by Franklin Graham's Good 
Samaritans, the pastoral faction of American 
capital. Their would-be victims 
are now free, after years of softening with 
sanctions and bombings, to 
receive the good word of the Lord. Even as I 
write, the Samaritan convoys 
are converging on Iraq, ready to trade American 
food and water for Iraqi 
souls. The Iraqis never knew a better bargain, 
getting something for 
nothing.
Iraq has now been freed, as Egypt had been freed 
by its third defeat at 
Israeli hands in 1973, to derive the inestimable 
benefits of normal 
relations with Israel. After 55 years, Iraqi oil 
is now free again to flow 
to Haifa. And, one might add, Iraqi water too. 
Freed from the threat of Iraq's WMDs, Israelis 
can now attack the 
Palestinian problem, the Palestinians in Judea 
and Samaria , with greater 
freedom. The pace of ethnic cleansing, too slow 
for an early final solution, 
can now be accelerated. Now that Iraq is free, 
with help from the Americans, 
the Palestinians can be teleported to the deserts 
of Western Iraq.
The war has freed another Arab capital from the 
threat of Israel's Samson 
option. The five million citizens of Baghdad, 
once the unimpeded looting 
stops, can sleep in peace. This is another 
inestimable gift of the war: an 
Iraq free from nuclear holocaust. 
If one counts all the advantages of America's war 
in Iraq, and I have 
barely started, history will record this war as 
the greatest opening in 
Iraqi history, when Iraqis were freed from the 
coils of convoluted tyranny.
Once the Iraqis wake to this shattering truth, 
they will also acknowledge 
their deep debt to Saddam Hussein. It was his 
anti-Zionism, his methodical 
recklessness, his development of WMDs that 
precipitated the American war in 
Iraq, the war that freed them. Without Saddam, 
the Iraqis would still be 
toiling under some vapid dictatorship, like Hosni 
Mubarak's, allied to 
Israel and receiving bribes from USAID. 
I can imagine a day, once the fog of America's 
war in Iraq clears, when the 
Iraqis may restore Saddam Hussein's statue to the 
high pedestal it occupied 
in Baghdad's Central Square. And these are the 
words that American visitors, 
in shock and awe, will read inscribed on its 
base: Saddam Hussein/A Brave 
Iraqi/Serendipitous Architect of Our Freedoms.
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M. Shahid Alam teaches economics at Northeastern 
University, Boston, USA. 
His recent book, Poverty from the Wealth of 
Nations, was published by 
Palgrave (2000).  © M. Shahid Alam
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2003-04-22 Tue 19:48ct