shah abbas was from household of Safi Addin Ardabili and they were from suffism and shiite.
The Shah of Iran was nominally Shiite, but was known as an ardent secularist.
Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi was a Shiite Muslim, but his political philosophy was strongly secularist in the same vision employed by Atatürk in Turkey.
he was Sunni.
sunni
The majority is Sunni.
Mirza Shah Abbas was born in 1845.
Iraq is majority Shiite, but has a significant Sunni minority.
Extremists come from both the Sunni and Shiite camp, but compose a minority in each.
Yes. There are Sunni Kurds (who form the majority) and Shiite Kurds (who form one of the Kurdish minorities).
they are Wahhabi that is a sunni sect.
No. The Sunni-Shiite Divide occurred in the 600s C.E., over 800 years before Colombus even discovered America. There are Muslims that claim that the United States is taking activities designed to keep the Sunnis and Shiites from reconciling, but even if it were true, this would not make the United States in anyway responsible for the original split and the majority of Sunni-Shiite animosity and grievances. This is false, though, since Sunni and Shiite Muslims have actually been brought together politically by the United States both domestically and in Iraqi politics. The United States has never supported a country or an army because it is Sunni or Shiite and even its detractors have noted that the United States supported Shiite Iran (under the Shah), Sunni Iraq (under Saddam Hussein), Wahhabi Saudi Arabia, and Israel all for primarily strategic reasons.
No, thats a shiite