“We, the Sadrists, are in a predicament,” said Hassan al Rubaie, leader of the 30-member Sadrist bloc in the Iraqi parliament. “Even the blocs that had in the past supported us are now against us.”
Jack Kelly explains…
Disregard what we told you last week. “Mainstream” journalists in Iraq haven’t said that in so many words. But the stories they’re writing this week say it implicitly.
On March 31, six days of fighting between Iraqi government forces and the Iranian-backed militia nominally headed by the Shia cleric Moqtada al Sadr subsided when al Sadr asked for a cease fire and his forces abandoned the battlefield. We were told at the time the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki had suffered a humiliating defeat.
…But this week’s stories make clear that Mr. Maliki is not acting like someone who has suffered a humiliating defeat, and Mr. al Sadr is not behaving like someone who has won a big victory.
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