Text Only
Search

 
Journalists Discuss Increasing Shi’a influence in Middle East


08 August 2006
Judith Latham's Report 1.2 MB (Real) - Download audio clip
Judith Latham's Report 3.4 MB (MP3) - Download (MP3) audio clip
Judith Latham's Report 3.4 MB (MP3) - Listen (MP3) audio clip

Shi'a crescent
Many analysts say Iran is using Hezbollah as part of a grand design to dominate the Middle East and introduce a Shi’a Muslim hegemony into the region
The war in Lebanon, which was triggered by the Hezbollah militia’s kidnapping of two Israeli soldiers, is entering its fifth week with Israeli troops and Hezbollah locked in fierce battles on several fronts.  Hezbollah, Lebanon’s radical Shi’a faction, is backed by Iran. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomenei recently pledged support to Lebanon in the fight against Israel and called on the nations of the Middle East to unite.

 

Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres said earlier this week that the current conflict is not simply between Israel and Hezbollah forces in Lebanon.  He said Iran is using Hezbollah, Hamas, and Syria as part of a grand design to dominate the Middle East and introduce a Shi’a Muslim hegemony into the region.   Moreover, that’s the way most people in Israel and in the U.S. administration view the problem, says Israeli journalist Ori Nir of the Forward.  Speaking with host Judith Latham of VOA News Now’s International Press Club, he says that events in Lebanon in the past three weeks have convinced him that Iran has been using Hezbollah as a “front for a much broader confrontation” between Sunnis and Shi’as.

 

Babak Yektafar, editor of the Persian-language magazine Washington Prism, agrees that other factors – such as religious and historical tensions between the mostly Sunni Arabs of the region and the largely Shi’a Persians of Iran – contribute to the problem, but it is the competition for political power that drives the two groups. 

 

Hezbollah rocket attacks
Hezbollah rockets continue to strike northern Israel. More than 2,500 rockets have hit Israel since fighting began four weeks ago, including about 800 in the last four days
Initially Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt were critical of Hezbollah for having provoked the war in Lebanon.  But, Jordanian reporter Rana Sabbagh says their populations are now more influenced by their sympathy for the suffering of the Lebanese civilians than by their Sunni Muslim identity.  Ms. Sabbagh notes that Jordan’s King Abdullah II was the first Arab head of state to warn of a Shi’a crescent, extending from Tehran to Beirut.  However, she says, the King never meant to talk about Shi’ism “as a faith but as a center of power.”  Rana Sabbagh suggests, for example, that Iran is “running the show” in Iraq and is also an “active player” in the Arab-Israeli conflict.  She says that Hezbollah and Hamas are the “local proxies” of Iran and Syria in Lebanon and Palestine.  And, she adds, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Yemen, Bahrain, and Kuwait have become “victims of this new crescent” as well.

 

Iraqi Shi'ites gather for a demonstration against Israel's bombing of Lebanon
Iraqi Shi'ites gather for a mass demonstration against Israel's bombing of Lebanon, in the Sadr City area of Baghdad, Aug. 4, 2006
Palestinian-Canadian journalist Jane Arraf, who was CNN’s former Baghdad bureau chief, says fear of Shi’a influence has always worried Sunni Arab leaders.  But Iraq’s sectarian situation is more nuanced than many people realize.  And she calls “excessive Iranian political influence” one of the most serious “unintended consequences” of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.  She warns that people need to remember that Iraqi Shi’as are Arab, and although they have a religious affinity with Iranian Shi’as, the two groups are “quite different,” which serves to limit how much support Iran actually has in Iraq.  But, from a Sunni perspective, Rana Sabbah says, the Arab world is now divided into two camps – an “Iranian-led camp” and an “American-led camp.”  She says the Arabs need to speak with a unified voice, which says, “We want a unified Iraq, not an Iraq broken up along sectarian lines.  We want the Lebanese government to assume full responsibility over a sovereign Lebanon.  And we want Hezbollah to pull out of the south and become a political party and not a military party.”  But most important, Rana Sabbagh says, there needs to be “movement on the bigger problem” – the Arab-Israeli conflict. 

 

To listen to all of the comments, click on the audio link above.

 

 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Iranian Cleric Asks Muslims to Send Weapons to Hezbollah
Iran Lauds Hezbollah, Vows Support for Lebanon
World Leaders Repeat Call for Peace in Middle East
Blair Predicts UN Resolution on Lebanon Within Days
Security Council Considers Amendments  to Truce Plan in Lebanon
Lebanon:The Need for International Peacekeepers
Muslim Leaders Call for Lebanon Cease-Fire, Peacekeeping Force
Muslim Countries Meet to Stem Violence in Lebanon
EU Calls for Immediate End of Hostilities Between Israel, Hezbollah
Peres Says Iran Uses Hezbollah to Divert Attention from its Nuclear Activity
Experts: Lebanon Crisis May Complicate Iran Nuclear Issue
American Opinion Split on US Position on Israel-Lebanon Conflict
 
  Top Story
Obama, World Leaders Honor Veterans on Anniversary of End WWI

  More Stories
French, German Leaders Commemorate Armistice Day  Audio Clip Available
Body of Missing US Soldier Found in Afghanistan
APEC Foreign Ministers Discourage Protectionism  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Urges Asian Pressure on Burma for Free Elections  Audio Clip Available
Clinton: Naval Clash Won't Stop Outreach to North Korea  Audio Clip Available
South Korean Military on High Alert After Naval Clash
UN Prosecutors Seek to Limit Taylor's Contact With Lawyers During Cross Examination  Audio Clip Available
Abbas Renews Call for Settlement Halt
Japan to Tell Obama It Wants Okinawa Marine Base Closed  Audio Clip Available
Egyptian Activist Nour Presses For More Rights in Political Process  Audio Clip Available
Australian PM Flies to India to Soothe Diplomatic Tensions
Cambodia Rejects Thai Request to Extradite Former Leader  Audio Clip Available
World War II Museum Expansion Aims at Younger Generations  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available