id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt mdp.39015052672220 Terrill, W. Andrew. Nationalism, sectarianism, and the future of the U.S. presence in post-Saddam Iraq W. Andrew Terrill 2003 .txt text/plain 3539 233 62 OF THE U.S. PRESENCE IN POST-SADDAM IRAQ to: Director, Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, 122 Forbes Some Iraqis also appear concerned that the U.S. military presence continued Western presence in Iraq. voice of the Shi'ite clerical establishment in the postwar era. It is also possible that the radical Shi'ite clergy would seek vote, one time."77 Currently, the press is reporting that many Iraqi Clerical rule may gain a new appeal in the post-Saddam era, The Sunnis and the Kurds in Post-Saddam Iraq. Shi'ite power appears to be on the rise in Iraq, increasing the possibility of a new Iraqi nationalism with a Shi'ite face. Iraqi Nationalism and Iranian Involvement in Postwar Iraq. Moreover, Iraq, even under Saddam, has been an exceptionally wellarmed society. While Shi'ite clerics were among the bitterest enemies of the Saddam to Shi'ite clerics. See Baghdad Republic of Iraq Television in Arabic "Saddam Husayn on ./cache/mdp.39015052672220.pdf ./txt/mdp.39015052672220.txt