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Most experts anticipate mounting resistance after Saddam
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By
Abdul Raheem Ali, IOL Staff
CAIRO,
December 15 (IslamOnline.net) – The capture of ousted Iraqi
president Saddam Hussein would give momentum to spiraling Iraqi
resistance against the U.S.-led occupation and cast clear light on who
really stand behind it, Egyptian military and political experts
expect.
They
said Saddam capture gives cause to the Shiites and even the Sunnis to
join the resistance, particularly the Shiites who remained neutral
after the downfall of Baghdad, fearing Saddam would be credited for
the resistance.
Saddam
was
captured Saturday night in a swift raid by U.S. forces near his
hometown of Tikrit but the ground-breaking news was only made public
Sunday, December 14.
Gihad
Ouda, professor of international affairs at Helwan University, said
Saddam capture put Iraqi Sunnis on "political alert",
expecting resistance to be intensified in the days to come.
"Saddam
capture will also re-shape Iraq's political landscape with the
emergence of new Sunni powers," he told IslamOnline.net.
Asked
about the Shiites' role in post-Saddam Iraq, the expert said they
would seek to restore their rights from which they were denied under
Saddam.
Shiites
would also try to show strength and influence to prove their
patriotism and keenness on booting the Americans out of Iraq, given
that they make up the majority of the Iraqi population, he added.
Ouda
argued that the envisaged rise in resistance operations would only
reflect a "political disunity", given that every party would
now rush to lay their cards on the table.
On
the transfer of power to Iraqis, he said Saddam’s capture
"would facilitate but not expedite the handover of power to the
Iraqis."
The
Egyptian expert also said the Americans will no face the challenge of
brining back a calm and normal life to the Iraqi people in the
chaos-mired country.
Saddam
Distanced
Munzir
Soliman, an Egyptian military and political expert, said finding
Saddam in a remote hut distances him from having a role in steering
the mounting resistance.
"Now
that Saddam is in custody, the days ahead will portray the character
of the resistance," he said.
Soliman
asserted that the resistance should adopt a unified agenda and be more
organized.
He
expected the capture to have "a limited" impact on the
anti-occupation resistance.
Admitting
the capture did give a morale boost for the U.S., the military expert
underlined that the high spirits would be short-lived.
Munzir
said the Iraqi resistance has a deeply-rooted religious and patriotic
record, noting that Iraqis were fighting off the Americans because
they felt humiliated and because they were loyal to the ousted regime.
"Even
Saddam's fedayeen and Baathists do not fight for his sake," he
opined.
For
his part, Mohammad Abdul Salam, a military expert at Al-Ahram Center
for Political and Strategic Studies, said all indicators point out
that the arms used in resistance operations have not been provided by
Saddam.
He,
however, feared that the capture of Saddam would have a negative
effect on the resistance, amid rumors he was the financier of several
resistance attacks.
Abdul
Salam further ruled out that the Americans would backtrack on their
pledges of speeding up power transfer to the Iraqis, warning this
would be a fatal mistake.