By Alan
Caruba
Don’t feel
bad if you can’t tell a Sunni Muslim from a Shiite Muslim. It has been a source
of confusion for many people outside the world of Islam. If Bret Stephens, a
Pulitzer Prize winning columnist for The Wall Street Journal is right, we are
witnessing “The Muslim Civil War.”
Here’s a
quick lesson regarding the two sects within Islam. Suffice to say that the
Sunnis are the vast majority throughout the Middle East and in nations where
Islam is the predominant religion. The greatest concentration of Shiites is
found in Iran and Iraq. Both Hezbollah and Hamas, Palestinians, are pledged to
destroy Israel, are Shiite.
Islam was
invented by Mohammed in the seventh century, an amalgam of pagan beliefs common
to Arab tribes in Arabia and a light overlay of Judaism with practices such as
the prohibition against eating the meat of pigs. In its earliest years,
Mohammed instructed converts to face toward Jerusalem when praying. After
Jewish tribes in Arabia refused to accept him as the new prophet of God, he
slaughtered them and Mecca became the center of Islam. He had some knowledge of
Christianity but disparaged it and, in time, embraced a hatred for all
“infidels” (unbelievers) unless they too converted.
Mohammed’s
death in 632 A.D. led to what could be called a family fight because a branch
of the family, his direct heirs—now known as Sunnis—became the first four
caliphs, taking over the leadership of Islam and ruling continuously in the
Arab world until the breakup of the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War I. The
Sunnis saw this as a devastating loss. The Sunnis comprised an estimated ninety
percent of all Muslims at the time and remain the majority.
The
conflict within Islam began when those called Shiites, the heirs of the fourth
caliph, Ali, began to insist that only his branch of the family were
legitimate. Without getting too deep in the weeds, when a mythical “Twelfth Imam”
disappeared in 931 A.D., Shiites located largely in Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon,
insisted that they had been deprived of a divinely inspired leader. Not until
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini led the movement to overthrow the Shah of Iran did
the Shiites believe that a legitimate religious figure had emerged.
To give
you an idea how deeply ingrained the schism between Sunni and Shiite is,
Stephens began his commentary noting that “Yusuf al-Qaradawi, the prominent
Sunni cleric, said Friday that Hezbollah and Iran are ‘more infidel than Jews
and Christians.’” Suffice to say that, among the faithful, it’s a toss-up
whether they hate each other more than they hate infidels.
“That a
sectarian war in Syria would stir similar religious furies in Iraq and Lebanon
was obvious more than a year ago, despite wishful administration thinking that
staying out of Syria would contain the war to Syria alone,” said Stephens.
“What should be obvious today is that we are at the down of a much wider Shiite-Sunni
war, the one that nearly materialized in Iraq in 2006, but didn’t because the
U.S. was there, militarily and diplomatically, to stop it.
One
example is the decision by members of the Gulf Cooperation Council in Jeddah to
punish Hezbollah for its “flagrant intervention in Syrian” against “freedom
fighters.” In Kuwait some 2,000 Lebanese Shiite residents will be deported. It
is expected that all six of the Sunni nations will follow suit. Hezbollah is an
Iranian proxy organization. Iran is a Shiite nation.
Americans,
sick of the wars we fought in Iraq and Afghanistan, are likely content to let
Muslims kill Muslims and doubtless want to stay out of the Syrian conflict. The
problem is that what are often called “extremist” Muslims have exported their
internal conflicts.
Osama bin
Laden was a Sunni and he declared war on the U.S. in 1986. By 2001 it arrived
dramatically in the form of 9/11 and most recently in Boston. Throughout Europe
comparable acts of terrorism have been occurring for decades. The realization
is slowly sinking in that we cannot sit on the sidelines and watch Muslims kill
each other because their internal wars have become our domestic threats. They are
shaping global power games. Where to intervene is the problem at a time when the
West is mired in its own financial woes.
Writing of
the U.S. reluctance to get sucked into the Syrian civil war, Stephens warned
that Americans may feel that, “if Vladimir Putin or Iran’s Ayatollah Khamenei
want to play in the Syrian dung heap they’re welcome to it. But these guys
aren’t dupes getting fleeced at a Damascene carpet shop. They are geopolitical
entrepreneurs who sense an opportunity in the wake of America’s retreat.”
Syria is a
humanitarian nightmare thanks to the slaughter of innocents and the more than a
million who have fled for refuge in Turkey and Jordan. In Turkey, a nation with
a proud secular tradition, one foot in the Middle East and one in Europe, the
efforts of its current government to impose Sharia law have tens of thousands
protesting in the streets opposing an elected but increasingly authoritarian
regime.
Daniel Pipes, the president of the Middle East Forum, took some issue with Stephens
saying, “The civil war in Syria has also benefited the West until now: It set
Sunni extremist against Shiite extremist, weakened the governments of Iran and
Syria, harmed the Hezbollah and Hamas terror organizations, caused the malign
AKP government of Turkey to stumble badly for the first time in its ten-year
reign, and created troubles for Moscow in the Middle East.”
“More
broadly, a region that constantly threatens the outside world has become so
focused on its own travails that its capacity to make trouble for others for
others is reduced,” says Pipes.
There is
much to be said for Pipes’ point of view. And for Stephens’ as well. From where
I sit, the conflicts in the Middle East are likely to be around for a very long
time to come. Islam is a failed religion despite being the faith of more than a
billion people. In the way Christianity split between East and West, and then
experienced the Reformation, Islam is experiencing significant internal deterioration
and external resistance.
Islam
veers between arrogant spiritual certitude and the constant evidence of its
failure to produce democratic governments with healthy economies, let along
societies in which justice and personal security exists. We may well be
witnessing the beginning of its demise, but none of us will be around when that
finally comes to pass.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
If the Muslim nations of Asia and North Africa want to commit suicide, the West should back off and let it happen.
ReplyDeleteWE NOT HAVE A DOG IN THIS BATTLE TO THE DEATH!
Somehow, every time I see a *Muslims killing Muslims* post on the 'net, I smile...
ReplyDeleteAs to telling them apart, I can't tell a Baptist from a Presbyterian so, I must be some sort of religious bigot... Maybe..
Fred, if they're having fun, they probably aren't Baptists. :-)
ReplyDeleteYou raise a good question, though. How DO Muslims tell whether one is a Sunni or a Shiite?
Every Western country needs to keep their noses out of this fight. Let them kill each other - and so what if Russia and Iran take centre-stage - let them. The only problem is that the refugees of these fights end up in our Western countries through the UN imposing their will on us - which leads to the further export of this cult into our societies. We really are our own worse enemies. We need to seal our borders and let Muslim-run countries look after their own. As it is, America is removing freedoms from their people BECAUSE of the people they're allowing into their country unchecked. The government causes the problem in the first place and then spies on their own citizens as the solution. Ironic much?
ReplyDeleteIslam is political http://www.politicalislam.com/blog/a-defeat-for-the-muslim-brotherhood/
ReplyDeleteThank you Alan, just learnt a lot from your artical,i say we should stay the hell out of there conflicts if they want to go on killing one another let them eventualy one faction will wipe out the other then it will become much easier to know who our friends are.
ReplyDeleteThere is even less logic in your comment. If it isn't Muslims killing one another, who is doing the killing?
ReplyDeleteNo, I mean that if they are not TRUE muslims. True muslims do not kill themselves.
ReplyDeleteYou can read the notions of Islam if younwant.
Let me explain to you
ReplyDeleteIn Islam, when somebody is elected, the population MUST follow him, as long as :
Do not order something that opose Islam rules.
His election duration is not finished.
In syrian case, none of this conditions allow bachar to continue, neither the fact that he was not elected by population, so they are ought to protest against.
Secondly, if arabic countries were REAL MUSLIMS, they won't wait until USA makes its decisions, they must stop immediately the violence so that no more inocent people will be killed. But USA is not allowing them to do that, so it is its responsability.
I hope you understand.
Please leave any comments.