Irrelevant. I was pointing out the demographics of the country. Saddam was a Sunni leader in a Shia majority state, and now power has transferred to the Shias because of which the Iranians are in control.
Read up on Dawa. They backed Khomeini during the Iran Revolution and are funded by Tehran. Now Iran and Iraq are allies, no different from Assad and Iranians being allies.
First, try to understand what I said, then start your dribble.
Irrelevant for you maybe but not everyone else that wants to get the full picture of a very complicated issue.
Saddam was nominally a Sunni. His religion and sect played no role whatsoever throughout 80% of his almost 30 year old rule. Nor his personal life. Acting like a religious person in public is a thing that EVERY ruler in the MENA/Mu slim world has to do from time to time. You see the same from Bashar today. He started to attend Friday prayers for the first time in his life recently. You make the math.
You did not read any of my posts in this thread it seems. Too bad for you, you could have learned something.
Another thing Arab and Assyrian Christians in Iraq were heavily represented compared to their actual demographics. Many still miss the Saddam era to this day.
Power has only transferred to those Shia Islamist parties because 1, USA removed Saddam, 2 those Iraqi Shia Islamist parties being best organized and being one of the oldest opposition groups to Saddam's rule.
And 3, Southern Iraq in general being very religious overall. Recently Iraq banned the sale and consumption of alcohol to make an example and most of the law makers who pushed for this law were Iraqi Shia Arabs from the South. As well as political parties.
You are too dumb it seems. You are teaching an Arab with ancestral ties to Iraq and family living there (moreover a person who has followed Iraqi events daily for 15 plus years) about elementary subject such as the Dawa party. Stop wasting my time with nonsense and acting like a fool.
Lastly you have posted an obvious propaganda article blaming the previous foreign minister of KSA however you are not able to post a video or even a audio confirming what is claimed in that propaganda article which should not be that hard as every public statement nowadays by such an important figure (foreign minister) is recorded either by video or audio or most commonly both. Either by media attending or even private persons. Simply because it is a lie. So obviously you are not here to have a discussion.
Saddam promoted the "faith campaign" for the same reason other muslim countries did the same. Soviet Union had collapsed after losing the war in Afghanistan due to the Mujahedin so Islamism gained huge popularity in the masses. As far as i know situation in Iraq and Syria is chaotic and the claims about ISIS are dubious at least. In Mosul the people who control the city are Saddams officers
Partially true but the main reasons were the ones I described in post 20. Moreover the whole ideology that was behind his rule (Ba'athism) already lost its importance when Nasser died and after the wars in 1967 and 1973.
The "Islamic" revolution in Iran and the US-USSR proxy war (Afghanistan was its playground) also helped the rise of "Islamism".
That is why I say that without that "revolution" and without the Grand Mosque Seizure (both occurred in 1979) things would have been much better, most probably.
This region, based on my conclusions, needs strong monarchial rulers or secular rulers in order to progress until the necessary changes in the societies have occurred for them to be truly representative societies. Everything else has failed so far. You can make your own conclusions why that is.
Also Islamism today is a very politically motivated ideology that encompasses 100's of different groups and views among Sunnis and Shias. Traditionally however it was a more spiritual thing (championed by Sufis mainly in the Arab world) in the old ages. It would be a good thing if we returned to the more spiritual side instead of the political one that has failed tremendously either due to regime policies or the lack of intellect among its followers (masses).