Iraqi Sunnis Smell the Coffee

What was it that the doomsayers said about the Sunnis becoming intractible since they weren't allowed to vote? We on the pro-regime change side of the blogosphere (including lots of characters from both aisles) have said for some time that it was the Sunni-led insurgency itself that led to the vote-deterring levels of violence in the Sunni Triangle, and that once Sunnis saw that is, in fact, possible to harangue each other about politics without literally being at each other's throats, they would want in.

Well, wonder of wonders: Sunni clerics are now calling for their co-sectarians to participate in the building of Iraq. FOX News borrows copy from the Associated Press on this item:

Influential Sunni scholars encouraged Iraqis to join the country's security forces and protect the country, issuing an edict Friday that departed sharply from earlier warnings against participating in the fledgling police and army

...

Friday's edict, endorsed by a group of 64 Sunni clerics and scholars, instructed enlistees to refrain from helping foreign troops against their own countrymen.

But Ahmed Abdul Ghafour al-Samarrai, a cleric in the influential Association of Muslim Scholars who read the edict during a sermon at a major Sunni mosque, said joining the Iraqi security forces was now necessary to prevent the country from falling into "the hands of those who have caused chaos, destruction and violated the sanctities."

If heeded, the announcement could strengthen Iraqi security forces, who are trying to take over the fight against the Sunni-led insurgency.

Not to be outdone, CNN headlines its take with "Clerics ask Sunnis to join Iraq security forces".

As with al-Sistani, the Sunni clerics are learning that the rightful place of organized religion is not to act as a substitute government, but to encourage its faithful to constructive social engagement. As Sunnis all over Iraq see that they need fear no physical reprisal from those that their co-sectarians oppressed for years, and indeed, only peaceful political bickering, they are realizing that insurgency is probably the least productive way to secure anything for their community. So, they are coming around, and looking for ways back into the fold. And that, my friends, is good news.

For those of you who insist that peaceful change can never occur in Iraq, permit me a heartfelt neener! at you!

[Cross-posted at Between Worlds]

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