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  • Sectarianism in Iraq: Antagonistic Visions of Unity
  • Eric Davis (bio)
Sectarianism in Iraq: Antagonistic Visions of Unity, by Fanar Haddad. New York: Columbia University Press, 2011. 296 pages. $35.

Iraqi officials often deny the existence of sectarianism in Iraq. Conversely, Western analysts often view Iraq as an artificial nation comprised of an amalgam of mutually conflictual ethnoconfessional groups. A binary that presents Iraq as either devoid of or consumed by sectarian identities is obviously conceptually flawed. In Sectarianism in Iraq, Fanar Haddad seeks to expand our understanding of this difficult and complex topic.

Drawing upon symbolic anthropology, cultural analysis, and post-modernism, the author develops a sophisticated analytic framework that emphasizes the impact of the post-Gulf War Uprising (Intifada) of 1991, the 2003 American invasion, and what the author terms the "civil war" that developed in the wake of the invasion to frame his study.

Sectarianism in Iraq is particularly insightful when examining the changing nature of social and political identities. The negative legacy of Saddam Husayn's political manipulation of ethnoconfessional identities, especially during the 1990s UN sanctions regime, was compounded after 2003 [End Page 174] by a weak state that has consistently failed to exercise the leadership needed to promote social trust and national reconciliation. The author deftly analyzes how Shi'i identities following 2003 have come to reflect the obverse of Sunni Arab identities prior to 2003. The once dominant Sunni Arab political community now expresses themes of marginalization and victimization similar to those formerly expressed by Shi'a.

Sectarianism in Iraq exhibits conceptual parallels with Kanan Makiya's Republic of Fear. While offering a trenchant critique of Ba'thist rule, Makiya presented Saddam's regime as so powerful as to create an aura of its invincibility. In the process, Makiya inadvertently provided Saddam's regime with support since his analysis suggested that efforts to overthrow it were futile. Likewise, Sectarianism in Iraq presents a picture of post-1991 (and especially post-2003) Iraq in which sectarian identities have paralyzed state and society. The volume leaves the reader with the feeling that Iraq suffers from a social disease that can never be cured.

In presenting a partial analysis, the author proffers a theory that is conceptually monochromatic, half of the dialectic as it were. On one hand, he is extremely thorough in demonstrating state discrimination against the Shi'a since the modern state's founding in 1921. However, the study says virtually nothing about the powerful nationalist movement that emerged after WWI which fought to promote a national sense of Iraqi identity and to unite Iraqis of all ethnic and confessional origins.

The historical memory of that movement still lives. As the author himself notes, a Rwanda-style genocide could never occur in Iraq (p. 54). Yet he never explains what factors lead some Iraqis to construct what he aptly terms a "myth-symbol complex" based in sectarianism as opposed to one that is grounded in a sense of national Iraqi identity.

Consequently, Sectarianism in Iraq cannot explain why Iraqis celebrated en masse Iraq's unexpected victory in the 2007 Asia Cup, or why Iraqi Shi'a and Sunnis (and even Arabs and Kurds) still intermarry. It offers little insight into why public opinion polls consistently show that Iraqis view unemployment and lack of social services as far more important problems than sectarianism. It cannot tell us why Rashid al-Khayyun's Against Sectarianism (Didd al-Ta'ifiya) was one of the most popular books at this past summer's Baghdad Book Fair.

The author cannot explain why so many Iraqis still keep a photograph of Gen. 'Abd al-Karim Qasim in their home or work. Qasim, the only modern Iraqi leader to rule in a non-sectarian manner (1959-1963), is still beloved for his commitment to social justice for all Iraqis, regardless of ethnoconfessional background. Clearly, Qasim's continued valorization provides an important insight on what Iraqis desire in a ruler today.

Nor does the author analyze the role of cross-cutting cleavages — based in social class, education, gender, generation, or ideology — in creating conflict within ethnoconfessional groups. For example, the mercantile middle classes, that form the social base for Nuri al...

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