While some of his Sunni kinsmen in Anbar province set about working with Shiite militias on a strategy to oust Islamic State, Emad al-Jumaili was making a very different kind of plan. The tribal elder was busy preparing to guard his home and family from those same militias. “I have always said I would much prefer to be killed by a Sunni terrorist organization than a Shiite terrorist organization,” said Mr. Jumaili. Islamic State now controls Palmyra, a Syrian city housing renowned archeological ruins. Amr Al Azm, Syrian antiquities expert at Shawnee State University, discusses what’s at risk. Photo: Getty That’s a big problem for the Shiite-dominated Iraqi government and its U.S. allies. They are […]