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Muqtada Al-Sadr and the Fall of Iraq

By: Patrick Cockburn
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Faber and Faber
ISBN: 0571239749
ISBN-13: 9780571239740
Released: 03 Apr 2008
RRP: £16.99
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Customer Reviews

Excellent book; gripping, informative and a testament to Cockburn's immense bravery. - By: Kabeer, 06 Jun 2008
The London Independent's Patrick Cockburn is simply the most important & well-informed journalist working in Iraq today. His new book Muqtada al-Sadr & the Falll of Iraq is crucial to understanding the new political dynamic governing today's Iraq in the aftermath of the US invasion of 2003, & the implications for Iraq's future of the newly empowered & hitherto repressed majority of the Iraq population, the Shi'a. The book's crescendo details the socio-political conditions & day-to-day events on the ground, which gave rise to the young & stern looking cleric, Muqtada al-Sadr, & the Sadrist movement's entry into the US-led coalition's sights. If you're looking for a biography of the elusive al-Sadr then you'll be disappointed, since Muqtada's personality, intentions as well as documentation of the man's rapid learning curve & steadily sharpened political instincts from the beginnings of the occupation aren't substantively addressed until two thirds into the book. This is my sole criticism since on the basis of the title alone some readers could find themselves disappointed. One can't reallly blame Cockburn since gaining access to Muqtada himself, extensive primary source material on his upbringing, his personal opinions & sentiments is at the present time a near impossible feat. With the materials Cockburn does have at his disposal he paints a compelling & vivid picture of Muqtada & his Sadrist forbears.

The book extensively covers documents Muqtada's pre-history, & to that end contains illuminating chapters on the Iran-Iraq War, the world-views of the Sadrists' spiritual father & leading intellectual figure, Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr, & Muqtada's father, Muhammad Muhammad Sadiq al-Sadr, Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr's successor as leader to the Sadrist movement. Both were fated to be executed by Saddam Hussein. Cockburn argues that the dispossessed & impoverished Shi'a of Iraq can't simply be dismissed & pawned off as mere emissaries of Iran. He examines Muqtada's family & personal history in depth & maps out the roots of his larger constituency & its development into a mass movement, whose ideological outlook comprises Iraqi nationalism, anti-colonialism & radical Shi'ism, posing a direct challlenge to Iraq's traditionallly quietist clerical establishment. The Sadrists from their inception have been sympathetic to Khomeinist doctrine & the latter's notion of velayat-e-faqih, or rule of the jurist-consult, which has deprived a great many, both inside & outside of Iraq of sleep. He also provides a trenchant assessment of Muqtada's ruthless pragmatism & great political acumen, evident merely in virtue of the fact that he has managed to survive in Iraq's turbulent political climate thus far, but also his links to the brutal slaying of his perceived rival, Abdul Majid al-Khoei, son of the late Grand Ayatollah Abul-Qassim Khoei.

Unlike important scholarly works such as Faleh A. Jabar's The Shi'ite Movement in Iraq & Yitzhak Nakash's The Shi'is of Iraq, Muqtada al-Sadr & the Falll of Iraq is written with Cockburn's typical flair & verve & is near impossible to put down once you've started reading. If you've read Cockburn's earlier book which chronicles the vicissitudes of Iraq's political scene post-Operation Iraqi Freedom (yeah, right), The Occupation, then you know what I'm talking about. Cockburn has provided us with a compelling account of contemporary Iraq & the ascendance of a new political force in the form of Muqtada & the underbelly of the forsaken & forgotten members of Iraq's Shi'a community. He has achieved an incredible feat journalism at great personal risk, which renders his efforts praiseworthy in themselves. He has performed an immense service to anyone who wishes to get their hands on an accurate depiction of the catastrophe that has befalllen Iraq & its people making, Muqtada al-Sadr & the Falll of Iraq, a depressing & yet necessary breath of fresh air if there ever was one.