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Do you mean, Sunnis and Shiites and Kurds?
There's no Sunnis and Shiites. There's no Democrats and Republicans.
Republican Guard presence, especially since it's this region that's the home to the Sunnis and Ba'athists.
A reversal of power in the hands of the Sunnis.
Iraq's controlled by Sunnis.
The Shias see him as the rightful heir of Muhammad, the Sunnis don't, and therein lies the. you know?
But you're saying, Mike, that this currency was never distributed to the Sunnis?
It's the sunnis and the shiites.
Do you distrust the Sunnis who were left during the occupation?
It is ruled out to leave Rakka to the Sunnis.
Kurds, Americans, Sunnis, Syrians and some of our own.
There's no Sunnis and Shiites.
Above Baghdad, we assume a significant Republican guard presence, especially since it's this region that's the home to the Sunnis and Ba'athists.
Don't some Sunnis think they get God's blessing by killing a Shia?
I don't see how Shias and Sunnis can justify the bloodshed they've brought upon each other?
Shias, Sunnis, Jews, Christians were all possessed by hatred.
Vaziri's devoutly Shia. Iraq's controlled by Sunnis. Saddam's Sunni.
Among Sunnis there are no women combatants.

News and current affairs

But he was unable to improve the situation or help Iraq's Shias and Sunnis reach a political compromise.
Indeed, what will now shape the future of the region is not democracy, but the violent divide between Shiites and Sunnis that the Iraq war precipitated.
Reassuring Iraq's Sunnis that they have a place in the new Iraq will also reassure neighboring Sunni governments, which have mostly turned a blind eye to the support for the insurgency that has come from their lands.
Such a referendum may also concentrate minds among the Arab Sunnis and Shia in Iraq, when they come to realize that it is their violence that is dismantling Iraq.
Although the Hijazis, who are Sunnis but not Wahhabis, are not viewed as heretics, they are marginalized because the Islam they practice has Sufi leanings--and tolerant Sufiism is anathema to the austerely dogmatic Wahhabis.
The key to resolving this dilemma will be to press for local compromises that involve Sunnis in the political process, and to step up the rate of training of Iraqis to manage their own security.
Saudi Arabia's ruling Sunnis are more threatened than is the US by Iran's support for a shift in the regional balance of power toward Shia Muslims.
This has produced - albeit with a certain amount of external pressure notably on behalf of the Sunnis - a document that may provide the basis for the rule of law.
This is notably the case where entrenched groups - Kurds, Shiites, Sunnis - compete for central power.
The Sunnis will go on with their murderous attacks on Shias, Kurds, and the US-led military coalition.
Unfortunately, Syria's moderate Sunnis came under attack from two sides: Assad's government and extremist adherents of Wahhabism, Islam's most intolerant school of thought.
Moreover, Iran's claim to leadership in the Muslim world is being undermined by the conflict in Iraq, where Iran supports the Shia militias that are killing Sunnis.
At another level, Iran's rise, reinforced by its suspected bid for nuclear weapons threatens to awaken historical hostilities, between Sunnis and Shiites and between Persians and Arabs.
War in Iraq will only exacerbate frictions between the country's Sunni minority and Shia majority, and such frictions could well be replicated elsewhere where Sunnis and Shia live side by side.
The US may have done something few could have expected: united the Shi'ites and the Sunnis in a common cause.
In some countries, football is the only thing that knits together disparate people, Shia and Sunnis in Iraq, or Muslims and Christians in Sudan.
The Sunni reaction to Iran may reflect deep-seated suspicions about the Shia (witness the cold shoulder given by most Sunnis to Shia rule in Iraq).
Given that the insurgency is centered among the Sunnis, this refusal is likely to make it more difficult to establish the security that is necessary for democratic government to work.
As for Syria, the revolt against one of the most secular autocracies in the Arab world has degenerated into a fight to the death between Sunnis and Shia that is spilling over to other countries in the region.
Indeed, Europe should avoid taking sides in the conflict between Shia and Sunnis or between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
Many foreign jihadists respond to the prospect of helping to overthrow a tyrannical Alawite ruler who is killing Sunnis.

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