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conscience with public funds
assassination
betrayals
lies
and killing righteous and innocent people.
6. That the Qureshites who represented the influential
aristocracy in the Muslim World loved and supported
him.
On the other hand
let us also suppose:
1. That Muaweyah was a Hashimite responsible for
many Qureshite deaths.
2. That he became caliph after the death of Othman
when the unity of the Muslims was broken.
3. That Quraish hated him because he was responsible
for the death of many Qureshites.
4. That Ayeshah
Talhah
and Al-Zubeir accused him
of the assassination of Othman and turned a great number
of Iraqi people against him and waged against him a costly
war in which thousands died.
5. That he stayed in Kufa only a short period after
that bloody war.
6. That the people of Iraq were the same people at that
time in arguments
disputes
extremism
and disobedience.
7. That Muaweyah was a man of principle concerned
with the Hereafter as much as with the present life or
more
so he would not compromise his principles for his
selfish interests. Nor would he allow himself to use any
means which are not in accord with the Islamic Law.
Then let us suppose that the two men met at a battle
such as the battle of Siffeen and each one had what he had
of intelligence
wisdom
and bravery; Ali with his unusual
bravery and Muaweyah with his weakness and cowardice.
What would be the outcome?
The answer is not difficult. Ali is the triumphant and
Muaweyah is the loser politically and militarily.
Even if we delete the 7th condition for Muaweyah and
suppose that the two men were equally opportunistic un-
bound by any principles Muaweyah would be the loser
politically and militarily. This is because the roots
of his authority would not have been spread and deepened
in the land of Iraq due to the shortage of his time in Iraq
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