Here is a vivid illustration of the correctness of today’s Daily Hugh. From AP, with thanks to Mackie:
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) – To Iran’s west lies a natural ally and perhaps its most potent weapon in the international fray over its nuclear program. While Iran and Iraq were arch enemies during the rule of Saddam Hussein, all signs point to an increasingly robust relationship now that Shiites have achieved a dominant role in the Iraqi leadership.
It’s a bond that has yet to reach its potential – in large part because the U.S.-led invasion is responsible for Iraqi Shiites being at the top of the political heap for the first time in modern history. Iraqi Shiites are not looking the gift horse in the mouth.
But Iran and Iraq share a Shiite Muslim majority and deep cultural and historic ties, and Tehran’s influence over its neighbor is growing. Iran will likely try to use Iraq as a battleground if the United States punishes Tehran economically or militarily, analysts say.
Many key positions in the Iraqi government now are occupied by men who took refuge in Iran to avoid oppression by the Saddam’s former Sunni Muslim-dominated Baathist regime.
Iraq’s powerful militias, meanwhile, have strong ties to Iran and have deeply infiltrated Iraqi security forces. They can be expected to side with Iran if the West should attack, said Paul Ingram of the British American Security Information Council.
“Iran has ties with Iraq which have not been mobilized as they could have been,” Ingram said. “The militias based in Iraq received much of their training from Iran and they have not taken any instructions yet.”
The Mahdi Army, loyal to firebrand anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, and the Badr Brigade, the military wing of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, both have significant links to Iran….
If Iran is attacked, “Iraqi Shiites will not take this lightly. They will not sit and watch,” said Diaa Rashwan, a Cairo-based analyst….
“The Shiite political class in Iraq believes that if they generally cooperate with the U.S. and Britain, eventually they will withdraw and leave the Shiites in power,” asked Juan Cole, a Middle East political analyst at the University of Michigan. “So far things have worked out wonderfully. Why rock the boat?”
For once, Juan Cole is right.