5.6.05

Remember This Guy?

Looks like one-time Rebel Cleric and Anti-US fighter Muqtada al-Sadr has seen his position change slightly over the past few months as political scene in Iraq changes:
Arguably Iraq's most popular Shiite group, followers of radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr have packed away their guns and now speak of "political resistance" rather than martyrdom in battle.

Once dismissed as an upstart, the portly al-Sadr has been transformed into a respectable political figure, commanding the loyalty of key lawmakers and several Cabinet ministers.

"We are growing stronger, and our appeal is becoming wider," Ibrahim al-Jaberi, a senior official at al-Sadr's office in Sadr City said Saturday.

Sadr City is a sprawling Baghdad neighborhood that's home to some 2.5 million Shiites and the largest bastion of support for al-Sadr. It was named for Muqtada's father, the late Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, who was killed in 1999.

In many ways today's "Sadrists" have changed since their heavily armed militia battled U.S. troops last fall, but their canny mix of politics, religious fervor and military capability make them the one group in postwar Iraq with the potential for rapid growth.

Since the fighting, al-Sadr has rebuilt ties with Iraq's largest Shiite party, after months of tension threatened to escalate into violence. His aides have been mediating between a Shiite militia and a Sunni group after they exchanged charges of involvement in the killing of each other's clerics.

Ahmad Chalabi, a former Washington insider who is now one of Iraq's most senior Shiite politicians, has actively been courting al-Sadr to hopefully widen his relatively limited grass roots base. A deputy prime minister, Chalabi is known to be lobbying for the release of hundreds of Sadrists in U.S. detention and rescinding an arrest warrant for al-Sadr's alleged role in the 2003 killing of a rival cleric.

In turn al-Sadr has turned down his rhetoric -- although he has not stopped calling for the Americans to leave. He is also no longer contemptuous, as he once was, toward senior Shiite clerics and secular-oriented Iraqi politicians like Chalabi.

Al-Sadr envoys also recently traveled to the Kurdish region in northern Iraq for talks with its leaders, long viewed as American stooges by the Sadrists.

Legislators have also traveled down the insurgent-infested road to the holy city of Najaf to the south to call on al-Sadr, whose young age -- 32 -- and lack of academic pedigree had led many not to take him seriously.

In large part, the Sadrists' new strength is evident in the discipline and organization shown by his Imam al-Mahdi Army, the militia which battled U.S. forces last year. The militia has quietly been restructured since the fighting ended last fall.

It is widely suspected of having hidden most of its weapons after the fighting, while hundreds of militia commanders last week finished a 45-day course in discipline and religious indoctrination that among other things involved dawn-to-dusk fasts.

At least in public, the militia now resembles an organization that is part relief organization and part neighborhood vigilante. The group has quietly taken control over security in Sadr City, making it by far the safest area in blood-soaked Baghdad.

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