{"id":6092,"date":"2005-10-14T16:50:56","date_gmt":"2005-10-14T21:50:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/?p=6092"},"modified":"2013-05-10T15:17:41","modified_gmt":"2013-05-10T19:17:41","slug":"october-14-2005-anthony-shadid-extended-interview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/2005\/10\/14\/october-14-2005-anthony-shadid-extended-interview\/6092\/","title":{"rendered":" Anthony Shadid Extended Interview"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Read Bob Abernethy&#8217;s extended interview with WASHINGTON POST correspondent Anthony Shadid:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You write at one point about the failure of the  occupation in Iraq. What happened? What went wrong?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I guess at one level I think we never appreciated what Iraq was  before we went into the country. I don&#8217;t think we ever understood its  history, and that&#8217;s what struck me as a reporter, as someone trying to  understand it myself, trying to make sense of what, when I was writing  for the WASHINGTON POST, was &#8212; you know, we&#8217;d inherited a country that  had gone through an eight-year war with Iran, a million dead and wounded  on both sides, a decade of sanctions that basically wiped out the  middle class, one of the world&#8217;s most brutal dictatorships, and the  country that we took over was brutalized, was traumatized. It wasn&#8217;t  going to be a blank slate, a tabula rasa on which to build a new  government, and I don&#8217;t think that was ever appreciated. I&#8217;m not sure  it&#8217;s even appreciated at this point.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: For Shiites and for Sunnis, what difference has  religion made and what have the consequences been?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-6094\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post02-shadidinterview.jpg\" alt=\"post02-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/>A: When I think back to some of the reporting &#8212; there were two stories  that I wrote before the invasion. One story was about this run on gun  stores, basically people buying weapons before the invasion. The other  story I wrote was about the growing numbers of people who were going to  mosques, who were embracing religion, this growing religious caste to  Iraqi society, and I&#8217;m struck, looking back, how those two things that I  saw just determined a lot of what&#8217;s happened in Iraq since then. Guns  obviously. There is a culture of violence; there is a sense of men with  guns determining politics in Iraq. I think just as important, perhaps  more important is the role that religion plays in Iraqi society. Among  Sunni Arabs, I think when we talk about religion in Iraq it&#8217;s the way  that religion is interpreted, the way it&#8217;s tailored to fit the demands  of any one place or any one people. Among the insurgents it can become a  very militant ideology. It can legitimize any kind of resistance  against a perceived enemy. Among Shiites, it&#8217;s a political program, in a  way. It shapes the political parties, it shapes the protest movements,  it creates the justification for their involvement in politics. And I  think we&#8217;re seeing it almost, you know, each of these cases, it&#8217;s almost  the exclusive axis on which politics, on which resistance, on which  protest revolves, and that&#8217;s something new in Iraq, I think.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: And what are the implications of it?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I don&#8217;t think we&#8217;ve seen the implications yet of it. When we talk  about the insurgency, I think there&#8217;s a worry among many Iraqis &#8212; I  think there&#8217;s growing signs of a hardening of this ideology, of what you  might call a religious absolutism that&#8217;s being increasingly embraced by  more and more people. I think there&#8217;s a sense among a lot of people  that it&#8217;s the foreigners that are the most militant, the most extreme of  the insurgents. I&#8217;m not sure that&#8217;s the case, and in fact I think if  all the foreigners were gone tomorrow, killed or arrested, you would  still have an insurgency that would be very powerful, probably along the  same lines of its intensity today. I think what we are seeing changing,  though, is that more and more Iraqis are going over to this kind of  religious absolutism. There&#8217;s more, it has more influence in their  ranks, and I think this is a worrisome sign for a lot of people  wondering what is going to become of the insurgency. I think when we  talk about Shiite Arabs or we talk about politics in general in Iraq,  the political process, it&#8217;s the sense that religion is being used to  define communities; in a way, it&#8217;s hardening the lines between sects and  ethnicities, between Shiites, Sunnis, and Kurds, and it&#8217;s sometimes  hard &#8212; it creates a gap that&#8217;s hard to bridge. It&#8217;s harder and harder  to see a voice that&#8217;s national, that speaks for all Iraqis. I think you  increasingly see voices that only speak, you know, with a religious  vocabulary in the name of Shiites, in the name of Sunnis. I think it&#8217;s  less pronounced under the Kurds, but it&#8217;s a similar phenomenon.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-6095\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post01-shadidinterview1.jpg\" alt=\"post01-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/><strong>Q: Do they see Americans as enemies, as infidels, as  somebody that they just cannot stand and need to have out of there?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I think there&#8217;s definitely kind of a visceral hatred of Americans  among some insurgents. Not necessarily all insurgents, but I think, you  know, there is that kind of very intense, I guess &#8220;hatred&#8221; is the word  you&#8217;d use, among insurgents. I guess what I&#8217;m struck by in conversations  and in reporting is that it&#8217;s not really a hatred as much as a  frustration, as a discontent, kind of a disenchantment, you know, I  think what we&#8217;ve seen since the invasion, since the fall of Saddam is a  growing disillusionment and a frustration, I think, that colors so many  people&#8217;s lives at this point that, you know, there&#8217;s still a lot to talk  about &#8212; freedom and democracy and liberation, these types of things &#8212;  but the challenge that most Iraqis face day to day is the overwhelming  challenge that they have to deal with. It&#8217;s suffocating, in a way, and,  you know, I think at a certain level politics become an indulgence.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Why couldn&#8217;t the American occupation leaders ever  get the electricity back on enough and get enough food and deal with  these day-to-day problems that are so frustrating for the people?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I&#8217;ve been there for two years now, and it&#8217;s a question I ask myself.  You know, when I&#8217;m there in the summer and it is 130 degrees outside &#8212;  we have a generator, where we live, so we&#8217;re lucky. But I think it&#8217;s a  question that Iraqis &#8212; you know, electricity is at the cornerstone of  modern life, and not having electricity can be overwhelming, especially  when you&#8217;re dealing with temperatures that are soaring past 100 degrees.  I suspect it&#8217;s something of a perfect storm. There was a certain  incompetence on the part of the occupation. They didn&#8217;t appreciate the  depth of the deterioration in the infrastructure, insurgents continued  to attack it &#8212; they know that success in rehabilitating the  infrastructure will be a success for the American administration &#8212; and  then there were other things like growing demand on electricity, these  things that all came together that prevented any kind of rehabilitation  in a meaningful way for most Iraqis.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: That&#8217;s the kind of thing that we&#8217;re supposed to  be good at.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Yeah, that&#8217;s right, it is, and the thing that I think shaped  sentiments probably more than any other single factor was the delivery  of these basic social services.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Who are the insurgents, and why can&#8217;t we control  them?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I struggled with that word as a reporter. What is exactly is an  insurgent? My best appreciation of it, totally more anecdotal than  anything else, is that there are many insurgencies, and it&#8217;s impossible  to, you know, define them as one current or one ideology or even one  approach, one campaign in fighting the Americans. You know, I think  there&#8217;s a criminal element to it, to be honest. I think it&#8217;s relatively  small, but there&#8217;s a criminal element. I think there is a leftover from  Saddam&#8217;s government, kind of a Baathist element, a Baathist current that  is probably a more traditional guerrilla war that we would have seen in  past decades. I think there&#8217;s an element that is like what I talked  about earlier, kind of a religious absolutist element, the most radical,  the most extreme, the current that can justify the carnage, the loss of  life of innocents that we see in Baghdad today. And I guess my fear is  that &#8212; or my sense maybe is a better way to put it &#8212; in talking to  people and hearing stories, is that current is probably gaining the most  traction, is gaining the most force these days.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: How do you explain that any religion, or Islam,  can be used to justify this random killing?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It&#8217;s a question that I&#8217;m asked often, and I think it&#8217;s something that  is tougher to understand. My understanding of it is that religion in  itself is one message; the interpretation of that religion is another  thing, and I&#8217;ve seen, just as a reporter in the Middle East over the  past decade, that Islam is very pliable in that sense. It&#8217;s very  flexible and it can be adapted very easily to local movements, local  demands, local fights and wars. I think we see it in Palestine, I think  we see it in Lebanon, I think we see it, you know, most spectacularly in  Iraq. When you see this violence going on today in Iraq, this violence  that is, you know, so hard for us to understand, this loss of innocence,  scores of people dying, has less to do with religion and more &#8212; my  sense, at least, is that it&#8217;s a very tactical move by the insurgents.  They understand that they&#8217;re not going to defeat the American military  on the battlefield, that it&#8217;s impossible. They do think they can defeat  the Americans in the realm of perceptions, that they can create this  perception of failure. And you create this perception of failure by  inflicting more carnage, creating an image of chaos, of anarchy. It&#8217;s a  spectacle, and you have to keep creating the spectacle, and to keep that  spectacle you have to keep killing more people and more people. It&#8217;s a  grim logic, it&#8217;s a brutal logic, but there is a certain logic to it.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: And it&#8217;s supported by their interpretation of  Islam?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-6096\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post03-shadidinterview.jpg\" alt=\"post03-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/>A: I think they use that as the cloak for it; they do sometimes have to  struggle to interpret it or to offer an interpretation or justification  through a religious lens, and you can see them struggling a little bit  because there are injunctions against, for instance, taking one&#8217;s life.  So how do you justify a suicide bombing, for instance, through religion,  and it&#8217;s not all that easy sometimes. It&#8217;s interpretations that I think  most scholars would disagree with pretty strongly.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: We&#8217;re coming up to a vote on the constitution.  What happens if the constitution is approved, and what happens if it&#8217;s  not?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: That, I think, is a fear among a lot of people &#8212; that whether it&#8217;s  approved or whether it&#8217;s rejected, you have the same result. Let me see  if I can kind of lay this out. You know, I think there&#8217;s a sense that it  all hinges on the Sunni Arab reaction to this constitution, the Sunni  Arabs being the community that&#8217;s probably most involved in the  insurgency. You know, if the constitution is approved, it&#8217;ll probably  deepen Sunni Arab resentment and in a way deepen the insurgency; you  have them probably feeling even more disenfranchised than they are  today. If it&#8217;s rejected, if the Sunni Arabs manage to get a two-thirds  vote in three provinces, which is necessary to reject the constitution,  then you start over from step one. And what we&#8217;ve seen so far in  drafting the constitution is, again, this hardening of lines between  sect and ethnicity, between Shiites, Sunnis, and Kurds, and if the  process starts all over again, there&#8217;s a sense that those lines will be  hardened even more. It&#8217;s a bleak prognosis, but you kind of fear that  with a rejection or with an approval you might end up with the same  outcome.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: The same outcome being a confrontation between  the men with guns?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It&#8217;s my sense, just as a reporter there, that there already is a  civil war under way in Iraq. We haven&#8217;t maybe acknowledged it as such,  but when you look at competing agendas, the competing factions, the  rivalries between communities and within communities, it already is a  civil war. I guess the fear is that you would intensify that civil war.  You would turn the country more and more over to this idea of men with  guns. It never made a lot of sense to me that you would see Iraq divided  among Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds. It would just be too difficult to  draw those borders. But it did make sense to me that you might see a  country ruled, you know, very locally by men with guns who impose their  own justice, who impose their law, who impose their own control, and  that they&#8217;re pretty much beyond the reach of the central government of  Baghdad.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: More and more Americans want the United States to  get the troops out. They don&#8217;t see what the mission is now and just  want to bring them home. What are the reactions to that idea among the  people you talk to in Iraq?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: People talk about it a lot. It is a huge issue of concern: What would  happen if the military left? I think you hear two things about a  military withdrawal. The one kind of forecast that&#8217;s voiced most often  is that if the military withdrew, it would lead to more chaos, more  instability, more strife, and in a way would deepen what might already  be a civil war under way, would intensify that conflict. I think there&#8217;s  another viewpoint out there, and it&#8217;s voiced less often but it is  heard, and that&#8217;s only with a military withdrawal could you reformulate  this political process. In other words, the Sunni Arabs will never join  the political process as long as it&#8217;s taking place under what they see  as an occupation. If you ended that occupation, you might be able to  incorporate Sunni Arabs into politics basically and start the process of  reconciliation. I don&#8217;t see it necessarily likely, but it is set out,  it is spoken out there. And it could be something short of withdrawal.  It could be a timetable set for withdrawal that would at least introduce  a new dynamic into the political process and maybe make some kind of  change possible, because I think even U.S. officials, both political and  military, in Iraq at this point are &#8212; the political process as it is  does not seem like it&#8217;s heading toward a more stable Iraq at this point,  and there is maybe a sense that you need a new dynamic introduced to  shake it up.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: And that would be a timetable?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: That&#8217;s one scenario offered out there, that even a timetable might  induce Sunnis to join the political process in a more forceful way.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Yet it sometimes seems that the hatred of Americans and the deep offense taken at the idea of foreign forces on their soil make it unlikely that we can achieve anything, because our very presence there seems to make it impossible for anything we want to come to be.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-6098\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post05-shadidinterview.jpg\" alt=\"post05-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/>A: I&#8217;ve thought about that, especially when it was 2004 and we said that  this insurgency was intensifying and that things weren&#8217;t going well. We  had a sense of it in 2003, but I think we especially felt it in 2004.  Was there any other way this could&#8217;ve played out differently? Could we  have done something differently? Could other policies have been  introduced, could the aftermath [have] been handled differently? Part of  me thinks there is a certain inevitability to all this, this idea of an  occupation, that when [you] have an occupier and an occupied, certain  dynamics are set in motion that you can&#8217;t deflect. I look back at Iraq  over the past couple of years &#8212; there&#8217;s often a debate about occupation  or liberation, which was it? It was a little bit of both, in a way; it  was a little bit of neither. More important to me were these forces that  we unleashed with Saddam&#8217;s fall, this idea of religious revival, of a  growing militancy, of a hardening of lines between sect and ethnicity,  and these are the forces that I think are beyond our control, in a way.  There&#8217;s nothing we can do to dent them, and these are the forces at a  certain level that are shaping the future Iraq.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You write often in your book about unintended  consequences. Is that what you mean?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Exactly, and unanticipated outcomes. I don&#8217;t think we would&#8217;ve ever  foreseen the power of the clergy, for instance, the Shiite clergy, in  politics. The Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the senior cleric, is  probably the most powerful figure in Iraq today. I don&#8217;t think anybody  would&#8217;ve forecast that before the invasion. These unanticipated  consequences and outcomes are, in a way, the most powerful forces in  Iraq today.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: It seems so hopeless.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>A:<\/strong> Sometimes just as a person, as a reporter there, I feel bleak,  but then I think there is a quality that Iraq is really remarkable for,  and that&#8217;s resilience. I think we&#8217;ve seen that resilience time and  again; I mean, we talk about this record of what shaped Iraq before the  invasion &#8212; war and tyranny and sanctions and deprivation. Through all  that you still see this resilience, and during the invasion itself.  There would be some of the nights with the worst bombing and the next  morning the streets would be filled with people and shops would be open,  and I think you still see this today, still there&#8217;s an ability to get  through the next day which is truly remarkable. Their resilience is  being tested, there&#8217;s no question. Good friends of mine who have been  the most optimistic are sometimes very bleak in their comments, but I  think it&#8217;s still there, I think it&#8217;s the best hope for the country as it  tries to get past this.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: In your judgment, do you think our objectives  would be better served if we got out?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It&#8217;s hard for me to see how the political process as it is now  working &#8212; I just don&#8217;t see how it works unless you have some kind of  move toward reconciliation. And I don&#8217;t see how you move toward  reconciliation without bringing Sunni Arabs in and, again, I think that  leads to the idea that I don&#8217;t see how you bring Sunni Arabs in without  at least a timetable for withdrawal. They seem all very connected to me.  That&#8217;s the only way I see us going forward, because I don&#8217;t see this  political process as it is now taking us toward a stable Iraq. Would  that work? I don&#8217;t know if that would work or not, but it is difficult  to see politics as they are or politics as usual at this point in Iraq  leading toward something different.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center\">*<\/p>\n<p><strong>Religion associate producer and researcher Janice D&#8217;Arcy interviewed  WASHINGTON POST correspondent Anthony Shadid, author of NIGHT DRAWS  NEAR: IRAQ&#8217;S PEOPLE IN THE SHADOW OF AMERICA&#8217;S WAR (Henry Holt, 2005) on  September 27, 2005 in Washington, DC.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Thanks for talking with us. Let&#8217;s start with a  description of Iraq&#8217;s prewar religious landscape.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: In terms of religion, before the invasion of 2003 &#8212; you saw it  especially over the 1990s &#8212; there&#8217;s a question I have to ask, and I&#8217;m  not sure what the answer is. There was a religious program that Saddam&#8217;s  government unleashed, kind of a program to increase the religiosity of  Iraqi society, I think, in a way to create new legitimacy for his  government, a government that was searching for different forms of  legitimacy. But Iraq did become more religious. Was it in response to  that program, or was it Saddam reacting to what was already under way in  the country? I&#8217;m not sure which was the impetus for this, but there&#8217;s  no question that the Iraqi landscape was becoming much more religious  over the 1990s &#8212; in terms of mosque attendance, in terms of the symbols  of religion, the language of religion, how it was used in government to  justify rules.<\/p>\n<p>In some ways what we are seeing now is the consequence of that. Religion  is one of the key forms of legitimacy in government today. I think we  saw the origins of that 10, 15 years ago.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: When Saddam was first toppled, divisions between  the Shiites and the Sunnis weren&#8217;t immediately apparent &#8212; at least the  divisions we&#8217;re seeing now.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-6099\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post06-shadidinterview.jpg\" alt=\"post06-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/>A: Yes, I think that&#8217;s true. I think, even today, you probably insult  someone if you ask if they&#8217;re Sunni or Shiite. It&#8217;s not a question you  would ask somebody, especially if you first meet them. I think that&#8217;s a  contrast to Lebanon, say. Lebanon is a similarly complex country where  people are very open about their sectarian identification &#8212; whether  they&#8217;re Greek Orthodox, or Maronite Catholic, or a Sunni or Shiite  Muslim. It&#8217;s not that way in Iraq. I think it&#8217;s one of the legacies of  the aftermath of the occupation that the lines between sect and  ethnicity have hardened to the degree that they have.<\/p>\n<p>In a way, I think we had a preconception of the country as Shiites,  Sunnis, and Kurds. I don&#8217;t think it was only that. It played a huge role  in Iraqi politics, but it was not only that. Today, in a lot of ways,  it is. That preconception has become a reality. In a way, politics are  almost exclusively organized around this communal identification &#8212;  whether you are Sunni, Shiite, or Kurd.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What was it about the invasion and the subsequent  occupation that encouraged that?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I think there were a lot of factors that went into it. In this vacuum  of authority, new forms of identity emerged. I think, at one level, it  was easy to identify yourselves along sectarian or ethnic lines. I don&#8217;t  think that was the overwhelming force. I think, in a lot of ways, this  was a top-down phenomenon. I think the American administration, when it  entered Iraq, had this notion of Iraqi politics, and so politics were  this kind of identification, a very specific representation of each sect  and ethnicity in the government &#8212; to a degree that it was never done  before. It always cast a shadow before Saddam, but it wasn&#8217;t done in  such specific fashion before. I think also, probably more importantly,  was the role of the exile parties that came into Iraq after Saddam&#8217;s  fall, that had been working with this notion abroad, these expatriate  parties that were organized around sectarian identification or ethnic  identification. There were Shiite parties, there were Kurdish parties. I  think they brought this notion of confessional politics, of communal  politics into Iraq when they came after Saddam&#8217;s fall.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What about the relationship with the clergy? The clergy seem to have become more influential at the same time.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-6100\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post07-shadidinterview.jpg\" alt=\"post07-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/>A: I think this is again one of the great legacies of the aftermath of  Saddam&#8217;s fall and the occupation. There was this vacuum of authority.  Other things came to fill that vacuum of authority. On one hand, in  Sunni areas, for instance, you had tribal justice reemerging as a way to  bring authority.  I think in the Shiite areas, especially in southern Iraq but also in Baghdad, you had the Shiite clergy emerging as one of  the few institutions that wasn&#8217;t devastated under Saddam&#8217;s rule. It was devastated, but it was still intact. When Saddam fell, it was able to  quickly emerge and fill that vacuum of authority.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: In your book you have a great description of the  difference between Grand Ayatollah Sistani and Shia cleric Moqtada  al-Sadr. Can you talk about them and the allegiance to them?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: They are very different movements, in a way. This is a point I try to  make in the book. Sistani and Sadr don&#8217;t necessarily disagree on  religion. On religious questions, they&#8217;re both from the same  institution, in a way. They probably share the same beliefs, a very  conservative notion of what religion is and what Islamic law should be.  They do disagree very clearly, though, on (1) the relationship to the  United States, to the occupation, and (2) on the notion of politics, on  the notion of activism. I think that&#8217;s what we&#8217;re seeing today, this  difference in politics and this difference in activism. When I was in  Najaf a few weeks ago, there was criticism of Grand Ayatollah Sistani  for not speaking out on issues that seem so important to the country  right now: the insurgency, the American military presence, the  constitution, a future government. Sistani is reserved. He&#8217;s been quiet.  Sadr is the very opposite of that. It&#8217;s a protest movement, in a way.  It&#8217;s a street movement. His Friday prayers are almost like revivalist  kind of things, there are 12 to 13 thousand people that will turn up to  one prayer meeting in Baghdad&#8217;s Sadr City, where his stronghold is. It&#8217;s  a protest movement. You can see that in the language they use, in their  relationship to their followers. The posters that they had at this  Friday prayer that I went to a few weeks ago was something like: &#8220;In a  land of two rivers, there&#8217;s no running water. In a land of oil, there&#8217;s  no gasoline&#8221; &#8212; very much trying to play social demands, trying to  fashion themselves as the representatives of the poor, of the  disenfranchised. I think that&#8217;s the source of their support these days.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Who is more influential on the street?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It&#8217;s two different kinds of influence, in a way. Nobody would  question Sistani&#8217;s authority as a Grand Ayatollah, as probably the  senior cleric in Iraq. Nobody is really competing with that. Sadr can&#8217;t  compete with that. He doesn&#8217;t have the academic credentials in the way  that Sistani does. But Sistani also couldn&#8217;t put a thousand people with  guns into the street in Basra, and that&#8217;s what Sadr can do. Iraq is  becoming increasingly a country that&#8217;s dominated by the men with guns &#8212;  the militias &#8212; and that&#8217;s where Sadr&#8217;s power is often derived. He has a  certain popular support. He fashions himself as the representative of  the poor and the disenfranchised. He also has a militia, a powerful  militia, a militia that has continued to organize beyond the purview of  the Americans in southern Iraq. When you travel in the south and you ask  people, &#8220;Who&#8217;s the most powerful?&#8221; they&#8217;ll say, &#8220;Well, Sadr&#8217;s the most  powerful.&#8221; You say, &#8220;He&#8217;s the most popular?&#8221; &#8220;No, no, he&#8217;s not the most  popular, but he can simply take over the city in a matter of days,  because he has the men with guns.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You were one of the first to write about him in  the WASHINGTON POST. Have you been surprised about his rise over the  last two years?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: No, I haven&#8217;t. I&#8217;ve always found him an interesting figure. I didn&#8217;t  know anything about him when I first met him in Najaf a few weeks after  Saddam&#8217;s fall. I don&#8217;t think any of us appreciated the influence of his  father&#8217;s ministry. His father was a Grand Ayatollah, like Sistani, a  very senior cleric. His father created this grassroots movement in Iraq  in the 1990s. But because Iraq was so isolated, it really wasn&#8217;t that  well known by people outside the country. And so I think a lot of us  were taken by surprise at Sadr&#8217;s power, at his son&#8217;s power after  Saddam&#8217;s fall. His power derived from the very fact that he was his  father&#8217;s son. He inherited his father&#8217;s movement. His father had been  assassinated in the late 1990s by Saddam&#8217;s agents. So Sadr inherited  this movement and becomes a very powerful figure. In a way, he  represents the first popular movement that emerged in Iraq after  Saddam&#8217;s fall. He still exerts a lot of influence and power. It struck  me when I met him soon after the war. He was shy, kind of bashful, in a  way. He didn&#8217;t have a lot of self-confidence. His Arabic was tentative,  in a way. He didn&#8217;t have the kind of eloquence that clerics often  employ. But it really didn&#8217;t matter, because he was his father&#8217;s son and  he also had a contingent of lieutenants, very powerful advisors and  very savvy advisors, young guys that were brash and confident. They kept  the movement alive between his father&#8217;s death in the late 1990s and  Saddam&#8217;s fall. In a way, they&#8217;re the real power in the movement.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: So that is when you first met him. When was the  last time?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I saw him about a year ago, I think. It&#8217;s been a while. He&#8217;s been a  lot more reclusive since the battles with the U.S. military. He fought  the military twice in 2004, so he&#8217;s been much more reclusive. He&#8217;s been a  little more outspoken lately. His lieutenants (the people I just  mentioned &#8212; these advisors or lieutenants), most of them were in jail  after the fights with the U.S. military in 2004. They&#8217;ve since been  released. I think you see a growing confidence on the part of the  movement that it can exert its power, can play a bigger role in Iraqi  politics, in Iraqi society in the sense of being a social protest  movement.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: We don&#8217;t hear much about the Christians and other  religious minorities. What&#8217;s the status of the Christian community in  Iraq now?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It&#8217;s a complicated picture. I think there&#8217;s a lot of fear and anxiety  among Iraqi Christians. There&#8217;s a fear that government is being  increasingly identified along religious lines, that the government has  kind of an Islamist cast, and that there&#8217;s not a place for them. I think  you have seen some migration out of the country of people who have  means to do so. I don&#8217;t want to overstate this. I want to be very  careful how I say this, but I think among some Christians there is maybe  a sense that Saddam was a brake against Islamist ambitions in the  country and that there is not necessarily a brake on those ambitions  anymore. In a country that increasingly has an Islamist cast to it,  there&#8217;s not a place for them, necessarily. So I think you&#8217;re seeing a  sense of marginalization, a fear of what&#8217;s ahead, that maybe the  community itself should probably stay reclusive, that they shouldn&#8217;t  play too big a role, not expose itself. At the same time, there is  political organizing going on. There are Christian parties. There is  representation in government and the ministries, but I&#8217;m talking about  the broader community itself.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: That leads us right into the constitutional  debates. Why is it that the Shiite leadership does not want to put an  overt reference to religious freedom in the constitution? They want to  acknowledge Sharia. Why is that so important to them?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-6101\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post08-shadidinterview.jpg\" alt=\"post08-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/>A: I think sometimes we underestimate how Islamist the Shiite parties  are, especially the Shiite parties that are allied with the United  States and are having a huge say in deciding the constitution. They are  Islamist parties, very much so. One of the main pillars of a platform  like the Supreme Council or other Islamist parties is this idea of  Islamic law, this idea of the preeminence of religion, of Islam being,  at the very minimum, a major source of legislation, often the source of  legislation. There is resistance to that notion, I think, among both  Sunnis and Kurds, who fear that the Shiite clergy themselves will have a  role as a final arbiter on specific laws, specific legislation,  specific policies. There is a reservation there about the role of the  clerical establishment in Iraqi politics.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: With a Shiite majority, is it possible that those  other groups that are concerned about it will have any sway?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: With the Shiite majority, it&#8217;s kind of difficult. I was often struck,  when I was covering the election and I&#8217;d ask questions about, &#8220;Will you  vote for Alawi, who&#8217;s more of a secular candidate, or will you vote for  the people that are perceived as being backed by Sistani?&#8221; People would  often say they like Alawi very much, but they can&#8217;t go against what is  known as the mujahi, which is Sistani basically, the supreme religious  authority. So I think people are often torn by this. It&#8217;s amazing to me  how much power Sistani&#8217;s office still holds or still wields in Iraqi  politics. You don&#8217;t have a similar organizing around religious  principles among Sunnis or Kurds. Politics are defined, I think, in  different terms. The Kurds are very invested in the project. The Kurds  are looking forward to consolidating their control over the Kurdish  regions in the north. It&#8217;s less a battle over Baghdad and the future of  Iraq and more about consolidating their control in the north. The Sunnis  are still disenfranchised, in a way. They are not willing to fully  participate in the political process as long as there&#8217;s the notion of  occupation. So you have all these kinds of checks. You have checks  against exerting their power and influence. I think it&#8217;s easier for  parties like the Supreme Council to further an agenda that might not be  accepted by the overwhelming majority.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: How is it being perceived by Iraqis that the  American leadership has tried to pressure them to change the  constitution, to include what we would consider democratic ideals?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: The constitution is an interesting debate. Again, it&#8217;s kind of  priorities of what&#8217;s going on in people&#8217;s lives that I think determines  how they perceive the constitution. What I mean by that is that I think  there is a sense that often &#8212; with the election in January and I think  with the constitution as well &#8212; there&#8217;s a sense that both of these  things are means to an end rather than the end in themselves. In other  words, with the election, with the constitution, we&#8217;re going to create a  more stable country. With a more stable country, basic services will be  delivered; there will be a notion of security, of safety, getting on  with more normal lives, ordinary lives. These are the ways towards that  goal. I never really saw the election choosing a specific candidate, or a  specific party or platform. It was just an instrument. I think there is  a sense of that with the constitution as well. That&#8217;s at one level: Is  the constitution going to bring us a more stable country? At another  level, I think the Americans may &#8212; I think you&#8217;ve already heard this  among Sunni Arabs in particular, that the Americans were too involved in  the drafting of the constitution, that this is an American  constitution. You often hear that criticism among the Sunnis. Among  Shiites, Shiite parties in particular, I think there is a sense that  this constitution is a way for them to consolidate what&#8217;s already the  reality: that they are the majority and the majority should rule. The  American involvement in this is complicated. They probably couldn&#8217;t have  gotten this far without American intervention, but this level of  intervention is probably going to forever taint the legitimacy of the  constitution, especially among Sunnis. So it will be interesting to see  how that plays out. I don&#8217;t know what it will do.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What are your expectations for what happens  October 15th?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-6102\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post09-shadidinterview.jpg\" alt=\"post09-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/>A: I think even the embassy there would acknowledge &#8212; American  officials would acknowledge &#8212; that without Sunni Arab participation in  the constitution, the constitution is not going to go through. The  constitution probably won&#8217;t represent a step towards reconciliation,  which is what everybody wants, a stable Iraq. As the political process  is unfolding, you don&#8217;t see that dynamic where it really changes  anything. It just seems to be more of the same. You look toward the  constitution. If the constitution is somehow rejected by Sunni Arabs &#8212;  which they can do; there&#8217;s a certain instrument that allows them to do  it, a majority in a certain number of provinces &#8212; if the Sunnis do  reject the constitution, we start over at the beginning, which is a very  prolonged interim period. If they don&#8217;t reject it, it deepens Sunni  resentment and deepens the insurgency probably at a certain a level. So  it&#8217;s hard to see how the constitution itself, as this path is set out,  does anything but keeps us on the same path we&#8217;re already on.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Do you see any possibility that, in the next few  weeks, there can be a rapprochement between the Shiites and the Sunnis,  or even in the next few months?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I don&#8217;t. I think you have to understand the dynamic in the political  process. I don&#8217;t see how you do that without something changing in a  serious way. Sunnis aren&#8217;t all of a sudden going to join the political  process unless they&#8217;re somehow brought into it. I don&#8217;t see how you  bring them into it as long as there&#8217;s an American military presence that  they view as an occupation. As long as the occupation exists, I don&#8217;t  see how they join the process.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: So what are your expectations beyond the  constitutional vote, for the next few years?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-6103\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2010\/04\/post10-shadidinterview.jpg\" alt=\"post10-shadidinterview\" width=\"240\" height=\"180\" \/>A: I don&#8217;t know. That&#8217;s a good question. My predictions are usually  wrong, to be honest. Could we have a relatively stable country in 10 or  15 years? It&#8217;s possible. Could we have a full-fledged civil war? I think  that&#8217;s possible, too. I guess probably we&#8217;re going to be writing about  the same things in five years that we&#8217;re writing about today. There  might be a deterioration of the country. We were talking earlier about  men with guns running parts of the country; not necessary Sunni against  Shiite, but maybe rival militias within the Shiite community, rival  factions within the Sunni community, each staking out their own turf,  trying to exert their own form of control. You can have a relatively  stable government in Baghdad, with a legislature and embassies and  ministries, but once you get into the hinterland, it&#8217;s less and less  control.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: That&#8217;s sobering. When did you last leave Iraq?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: A few weeks ago, the end of August.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: How long have you spent there?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I went there in 1998 as a reporter for the Associated Press; in 2002  with the BOSTON GLOBE; then in March 2003 with the WASHINGTON POST,  before the invasion, and then I stayed throughout, except for six months  to write the book in 2004.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: In terms of personal safety, are you feeling most  endangered now?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: Yes, in some ways. I think the threat of kidnapping may have receded a  little bit since last year. I think it was worse last year. But I think  the threat of being caught in violence &#8212; I think the level of violence  itself is much more intense. So that&#8217;s a greater danger. I was in Basra  a few weeks ago. In Basra, I often felt very safe reporting there. I&#8217;d  sit in caf\u00e9s in the open. Lately, it&#8217;s become very dangerous. These  militias, these men with guns that I&#8217;ve been talking about and their  security forces, there&#8217;s not a lot of accountability.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q. Especially for journalists, yes?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A. Especially. I think two journalists have been killed there in the  past few months. You look at a policeman in Basra and you don&#8217;t know if  he&#8217;s there to protect you or to do something else. That&#8217;s the most  scared I&#8217;ve been as a reporter. I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;d go back there.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You wouldn&#8217;t go back to Basra?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: No, not at this point.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Could that become a model for other cities?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: You wonder. I think there is a move by the Supreme Council, the  Shiite party, to take control of security forces. I think the Pesh  Murga, the Kurdish militia, are doing the same in the north. Where this  all leads, I don&#8217;t know, but the security forces are not professional,  independent units at this point. They&#8217;re units with an agenda, with  loyalties elsewhere.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: You are an Arab American, grew up in Oklahoma,  your family is from Lebanon originally.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: My grandparents emigrated from Lebanon.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: Did you learn Arabic at home?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I didn&#8217;t, no; a little bit, just a few words here and there. I  studied Arabic in college and then in Cairo for a year and then lived in  Egypt for four and a half years.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: This book is filled with voices we haven&#8217;t heard  from too often in the American media &#8212; Iraqi voices. How have you been  able to pierce that wall that so many journalists haven&#8217;t been able to?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I don&#8217;t know. I never really looked at other reporters, so I don&#8217;t  know how they operate. I guess the route I always try to do is just to  listen. I try not to lecture people, try not to tell people what they  should think or what they should do. Just hear them out. My favorite  interviews last five or six hours. It&#8217;s all about building up trust.  That&#8217;s what I tried to do in Baghdad. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it  didn&#8217;t. I think about the relationships that I built with the people  that are in the book. Those are relationships that I built over a year,  sometimes two years, and I&#8217;m still in touch with [them]. After that kind  of perspective on them and the things they&#8217;re going through, you build a  deeper and more intimate portrait of the country.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What is your own religion?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: My family is Orthodox Christian.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: How did you come to be the Islamic affairs  reporter for the [WASHINGTON] POST? How did you learn about the Islamic  faith?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: It was interesting. As a reporter with the AP in Cairo in 1995, I  thought the Israeli-Palestinian conflict shaped almost everything in the  Middle East. What I soon realized was that that wasn&#8217;t the case. It  does; it has a huge role in the region&#8217;s politics. But I was struck by  how big a force political Islam had become in shaping movements, in  shaping political language, in shaping authority. In &#8217;95 and &#8217;96, I did a  series of articles for the AP that later became a book about Islamic  democracy. As a reporter trying to understand the region, you have to  try to understand the forces that are shaping the region. I think it is  conflicts like the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I think it is Islam,  especially political Islam. I think more and more, even today it&#8217;s  become this question of identity and who we are in countries like Syria  and Lebanon and Iraq and Saudi Arabia. The thing that struck me most  recently is that question of identity. Once you answer that question of  identity, then you start answering the question of what kind of  political systems are put in place.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What is your definition of &#8220;political Islam&#8221;?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: The use of Islam as a political program. It&#8217;s kind of a vague thing:  The use of imagery, of symbols, of the law itself to tailor a political  movement to a political program. The very direct intersection between  faith and politics. I think we&#8217;re seeing more and more of that.  Movements like Arab nationalism, for instance, or more local nationalism  &#8212; Egyptian nationalism, Syrian nationalism &#8212; they&#8217;re much less  resonant than a religious message that&#8217;s tailored toward politics, which  I think we see as having the greatest influence and greatest power in  countries like Egypt, Syria, Iraq, the Gulf, every Arab country you  cover these days.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Q: What do you think of the conversation we&#8217;re  having here in the United States about whether Islam is or is not a  religion of peace?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A: I guess it&#8217;s not the question I would ask. To me, it&#8217;s immaterial, in  a way. It depends on how somebody defines and interprets it. It depends  on what kind of religion it is. To me, the bigger question is: Can  political Islam, or the interpretations of political Islam you see in  certain countries, coexist with democracy? An even more direct question:  Can democracy exist without it? In other words, do you have to bring  Islamists into the political process if you&#8217;re going to have a viable  political process? It&#8217;s a question that hasn&#8217;t been answered yet. I  think the administration, the U.S. government, is very reluctant to see  Islamists join the political process. They fear that once they join it  they&#8217;ll hijack it. But then how do you represent a quarter or a third of  the population of countries like Egypt, who identify themselves with  these movements? How can you have a democracy without those people being  represented? I don&#8217;t know the answer to that.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Read Bob Abernethy&#8217;s extended interview with WASHINGTON POST correspondent Anthony Shadid: Q: You write at one point about the failure of the occupation in Iraq. What happened? What went wrong? A: I guess at one level I think we never &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/2005\/10\/14\/october-14-2005-anthony-shadid-extended-interview\/6092\/\" class=\"more\">More <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":72,"featured_media":16991,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[7715,4689,1226,1857,417,4591],"class_list":["post-6092","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-anthony-shadid","tag-christianity","tag-elections","tag-iraq","tag-islam","tag-shia-sunni-conflict","topics-international"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.1.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 14, 2005 ~ Anthony Shadid Extended Interview | October 14, 2005 | Religion &amp; Ethics NewsWeekly | PBS<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Read extended interviews with WASHINGTON POST correspondent Anthony Shadid about the upcoming Iraqi elections and the role of religion in Iraqi society.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/2005\/10\/14\/october-14-2005-anthony-shadid-extended-interview\/6092\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 14, 2005 ~ Anthony Shadid Extended Interview | October 14, 2005 | Religion &amp; 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