JMD on NBN: Samuel Helfont's Compulsion in Religion, Saddam Hussein, Islam and the Roots of Insurgencies in Iraq
SAMUEL HELFONT
Compulsion in Religion
Saddam Hussein,
Islam and the Roots of Insurgencies in Iraq
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 2018
October 1,
2018 James M. Dorsey
Samuel
Helfont‘s Compulsion in Religion: Saddam
Hussein, Islam and the Roots of Insurgencies in Iraq (Oxford University Press, 2018) makes an
invaluable contribution to an understanding of Iraqi strongman’s Saddam Hussein
harnessing of Islam in support of his Baathist regime and ideology and to
ensure that Islam as a social institution is incapable of turning against him.
In doing so, Helfont also contributes to the understanding of the dynamics of
religious legitimization of autocratic and illiberal regimes that is at the
core of struggles in countries like Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. Helfont’s
well-written, easily accessible book benefits from access to documents of
Saddam Hussein’s government and Baath Party that were captured by US and
opposition forces in the wake of the 2003 US invasion and have been unavailable
until recently. Helfont also positions religion as a social force that
represents both an opportunity and an asset to autocratic leaders who on the
one hand garner legitimacy by identification with the faith but also need to
ensure that it does not emerge as the motor of opposition or resistance.
Helfont further demonstrates that in contrast to the immense infrastructure
that Saddam rolled out to bend Islam to his will and interpretation, US forces
underestimated the degree of social control that he exerted and lacked the
institutional and intelligence capacity to manage religious sentiment in the
wake of his overthrow. The breakdown in social control explains, at least in
part, the religious insurgencies the US confronted in Iraq since 2003. With his
analysis of the management of religion by Saddam and the breakdown after his
fall, Helfont has made an important contribution to the study of Iraq.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School
of International Studies.
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