Any and all inter-communal killings in Iraq were triggered by the so-called "Islamic State"'s 2006 bombing of the Al-Askari shrine, which is holy to Shia Muslims.
Prior to that, no Shia Iraqi group had engaged in killing civilians. As for Iran, she never directed nor ordered her allies to commit revenge killings even after the 2006 attack.
It's just that when you have a terrorist organization openly declaring war on your community (elderly, women and children included), bombing holy sites as well as civilian places on a near daily basis, to some extent revenge killings won't be evitable, whether carried out by pro-Iranian or other Shia Iraqis not necessarily loyal to Iran.
Try sending a group of people to Mecca, among whom you recruit a handful of terrorists; have these terrorists first blow up the Kaaba (nauzubillah), followed by attacks on civilian locations (such as busy markets) every day for several years in a row, then see what happens not just to the terrorists but also to the people they stem from, and whether or not Saudi rulers will be able to fully control their subjects in such a horrible event.
No, it didn't. Substantiate your claim with evidence.
They were volunteers and did not need to be brainwashed. Also these were not little children but usually in their teens. Iranians are very patriotic and religious people, so in case their homeland is attacked, the average teenager is guaranteed to be strongly motivated to join the frontlines, propaganda or not.
Sorry, but no. Show us some hard evidence that Iranian forces engaged in such actions in Syria. Iran's is not in command of every unit of the Syrian armed forces.
Many Shia lost their lives too. What's with the attempt to paint Iranian authorities as somehow biased against minorities, which isn't grounded in truth?
But as said, we're talking about terrorists groups here, not about ordinary civilians. They took up arms against a government which happened to result from a popular revolution, and therefore enjoyed (and enjoys) the support of a great majority of its citizens. We're certainly
not talking about random civilians being deliberately targeted!
That's a complete fabrication.
1) Fundamentally, the distinction between Sunni and Shia mosques is questionable. They are largely identical indeed, the only possible differences being the public call to prayer (where Shia Muslims add two additional lines compared to their Sunni peers), and whether the prayer leader is a Sunni or a Shia.
However, Iranian authorities never forbade Shia Muslims to pray behind a Sunni imam or vice versa. If some people have a problem with that, they are in no position to label the Iranian government as "sectarianist".
2) Even so,
Tehran actually does actually have around 100 Sunni mosques, which are fully controlled by Sunnis, for a population of around 600.000 Sunni Muslims (and perhaps 800.000 or 900.000 Sunni Muslims in the Greater Tehran metropolitan area), not 2 million.
Sunni Muslims represent about 6%, perhaps 7% of Iran's population; Tehran has 9 million inhabitants, Greater Tehran about 15 million. Why do you expect the percentage of Sunni Muslims in the capital to be more than twice the national average?
And here is undeniable proof for the existence of Sunni mosques in Tehran:
The interview was conducted by an Albanian academic, Olsi Jazexhi, who visited Iran and is
himself a Sunni Muslim.
The alim you can see in the video is
the Sunni Muslim imam of Tehran's famous Sadeghieh-district Sunni mosque, which is entirely managed by Sunnis and even includes a center of learning for Sunni figh. This mosque is a large four storey building no less.
The same respected
Sunni Muslim alim, at the beginning of the interview,
confirms there are 100 Sunni mosques in Tehran.
He
debunks the propaganda that claims Sunni Muslims are facing restrictions to their religious freedom in Iran. He goes on to explain that Sunni Iranians
are absolutely free to praise the caliphs Abu Bakr, Omar and Osman, as well the Prophet's (sws) wife Aisha. In effect and for good measure,
he praises them on camera for everyone to see.
When asked if they are free to
teach their faith to students, the scholar replies that the only thing they're expected to refrain from is classifying their Shia Muslim brothers as kuffar.
Another video of a Sunni imam leading prayers at a Tehran mosque:
When it comes to Tehran's Sunni mosques, the sole practical limitations they face, is that their Sunni version of the azan should not be amplified outside the mosque. Within the premises of their mosques however, they have no problem at all performing their azan. And this only applies to Shia-majority regions: in the Sunni-majority areas of Iran, the Sunni azan is allowed to be audible everywhere.
See undisputable proof here:
You claim I am being misled by propaganda, yet here you are clearly rehashing a typical piece of anti-Iranian disinformation without having had the curiosity or objectivity to search by yourself for possible evidence to the contrary.
3) In the Sunni-majority areas of Iran,
the number of (Sunni) mosques per inhabitant is superior to the number of (Shia) mosques per inhabitant in the country's Shia-majority areas!
4) Not only are there plenty of Sunni mosques,
Iran is also home to numerous well-regarded Sunni Islamic centers of learning, which even attract foreign students.
A Sunni Muslim brother from Herat, Afghanistan studying Islam at Al-Mostafa University in Golestan province, Iran:
Shaykh Ismail Subhani from Azamiyeh madrasah in Bandar Torkaman speaks about Sunni Islam in Iran:
Now these are hardly things a government with a sectarianist bias against Sunni Muslims would do.
For someone claiming to be of secular persuasion, you appear to be quite receptive to propaganda issued by religious types (usually sectarianists) opposed to Iran.
Iran is blessed with something that sets it apart from virtually every other state on earth, except for a few others such as North Korea, Venezuela and Cuba: the immense courage and fortitude it takes to challenge the zio-American imperial order head on.
Iran is not in a conflict with Pakistan.
Qualifying holders of dissenting views as "mentally ill", where do I know this from? Ah yes, the USSR it was.
My upbringing caused me to stay respectful despite your ad hominems. That's not bad already.
That's a wholly erroneous assessment, devoid of historic veracity to those in the know of these topics.