Iraq |
Brother of Iraqi Sunni leader killed |
2006-04-18 |
![]() The discovery, after gunmen shot dead the brother of leading Sunni politician Tareq Hashemi on Thursday, threatens to intensify sectarian tensions between Iraq's majority Shiite community and minority Sunni Arabs. The bodies of 12 shooting victims, some showing signs of torture, were found in different areas of Baghdad on Monday, interior ministry sources said. Highlighting Iraq's security crisis, about 50 insurgents mounted a brazen attack on Iraqi forces in Baghdad early on Monday, prompting US troops to provide support in a battle that lasted seven hours, said an American military spokesman. The guerrillas attacked Iraqi forces in the mostly Sunni Arab district of Adhamiya in northern Baghdad overnight, forcing other Iraqi toops to come to their aid. Five rebels were killed and one member of the Iraqi forces was wounded. There were no US casualties, said the spokesman. "It was quite a battle. It lasted seven hours," said the spokesman. |
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Iraq | ||||
Iraqi politician: 'US raid untimely' | ||||
2006-03-19 | ||||
An Iraqi politician has criticised a highly publicised US-led assault, saying it will send a discouraging signal at a time when leaders are seeking a political solution to the country's woes.
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Iraq |
Jaafari faces big challenges as PM |
2006-02-13 |
Ibrahim al-Jaafari, the soft-spoken Shi'ite doctor who has led Iraq for the past year, won his coalition's nomination for prime minister by a single vote yesterday, setting himself on course to head the country's first full-term government since the fall of Saddam Hussein. Over a four-year term, Jaafari will be expected to confront the vast challenges Iraq faces -- a crumbling infrastructure and rampant violence -- despite his failure to solve these problems during his time in office as the leader of Iraq's interim government. The decision represents a setback for some Iraqis and US officials who would have preferred a more secular leader. The choice of Jaafari came after days of wrangling within the coalition of Shi'ite religious parties that won the largest share of seats in the December parliamentary elections. The leaders of the United Iraqi Alliance had hoped to resolve the contest between Jaafari and Adil Abdul-Mahdi, a secular economist, by consensus, but ended up deciding the matter by a 64-to-63 vote. The popular and fiercely anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr threw his support behind Jaafari's Dawa Party, tipping the balance against Abdul-Mahdi's Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq. Jaafari then garnered the support of enough independent voters to eke out a narrow victory. Because it will hold 130 seats in parliament -- far more than competing Sunni Arab, Kurdish, and secular blocs -- the Shi'ite alliance is almost assured of having its choice named as prime minister when the newly elected Iraqi parliament formally takes office in two weeks. Under Iraq's system of government, the prime minister is the most powerful public official, with the president serving in a largely symbolic capacity. Jaafari, 59, an intellectual given to quoting poets and philosophers in his public speeches, appeared to be painfully aware of the burden of leading a country still in chaos nearly three years after a US-led coalition toppled Hussein's dictatorship. The country is torn by rivalries among Shi'ites, Sunni Arabs, and Kurds. Its infrastructure is in tatters after decades of war and neglect. And the leader of the country's most violent insurgent organization, Al Qaeda in Iraq, has sworn to destroy the country's nascent democracy. ''You should console me in this situation," Jaafari told Abdul-Mahdi when the latter congratulated him. ''This is a big burden and a position of difficulties." None of the problems, least of all the violence, has shown dramatic improvement during Jaafari's year in office. Some Iraqis complained of the continuing crisis in interviews yesterday, and wondered whether Jaafari was the right leader for the job. ''Everything went from bad to worse," Samer Abllahad, a shopkeeper in Baghdad, said of Jaafari's year as interim prime minister. ''I think the main reason was that he did not have time to make a difference. Maybe in the coming four years, he will be able to make some changes and bring safety to the country." Jaafari's challenges begin with gaining the acceptance of ethnic and sectarian factions who have quarreled with him since April, when he took over a temporary government charged with writing the constitution and holding parliamentary elections. Kurdish leaders, who run a largely autonomous region in northern Iraq, have argued with Jaafari over who will control the oil-rich city of Kirkuk. The Sunni Arabs, who once received preferential treatment under Hussein, now complain of abuses at the hands of government security forces dominated by Shi'ite militias. Others worry about Jaafari's close ties to the Islamic theocracy in Iran, where he spent several years in exile. ''I think the alliance has committed a big strategic mistake," said Tariq Hashimi, the secretary general of the Iraqi Islamic Party, a Sunni group. ''Al-Jaafari's name is connected to a government that has won a record for the weakest performance in the country." He went on to say that Jaafari's ''name is connected to all the human rights abuse scandals in the country." Jaafari's first order of business is to form a government, a process that could take months. Among the most thorny questions is how many Sunnis will enter the government, particularly the important posts of defense minister and interior minister. Sunni leaders hope to control at least one of the security posts in the hope that they can rein in abuses by the police and Shi'ite militias. If Jaafari ''chose new ministers of no ethnic motivations and no background of corruption, there will be a chance to cooperate with him," said Saleh Mutlak, the head of one of the Sunni parties. ''Generally, the performance will depend on the cabinet he'd choose, not only on him." While US officials have expressed a preference for secular leaders in the past, in several official statements they have said they will accept the outcome of elections so long as the leaders are effective. At the news conference yesterday, Jaafari's opponents in the Shi'ite alliance said they would unite behind their nominee. ''We all stand beside him as one hand to do the job that the alliance, the next government and the parliament are tasked with," Abdul-Mahdi said. Jaafari, looking ashen-faced behind the podium, said he was wary of taking a job with so many perils. ''The smile on my lips would have been wider if I were excused of this responsibility," he said. |
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Iraq |
Al-Zawahiri sez Bush should admit defeat in Iraq |
2006-01-07 |
Al Qaeda's second-in-command said President Bush had admitted defeat in Iraq by announcing plans to reduce the American troop presence in the country, saying the move would be a victory for Islam. Ayman Zawahiri's videotaped remarks, broadcast on al-Jazeera television Friday, came after two days of suicide bombings in Iraq killed almost 200 people, 11 of them U.S. soldiers. Al Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq is widely believed to have been behind the deadliest of the attacks. "Bush, you must admit that you have been defeated in Iraq and that you are being defeated in Afghanistan and that you will soon be defeated in Palestine," Zawahiri said, according to a translation of his statement by the Washington-based SITE Institute. Zawahiri, an Egyptian who is al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden's top lieutenant, warned Americans that "as long as you do not deal with Muslim nations with understanding and respect, you will still go from one disaster to another. And your calamity will not end, unless you leave our lands and stop stealing our resources and stop supporting the bad rulers in our countries." News services quoted U.S. officials as saying the tape was probably authentic. Maj. Gen. Stephen T. Johnson, commander of U.S. forces in Anbar province, blamed al Qaeda for what he called a "horrific" suicide bomb attack Thursday on Iraqi police applicants in the western city of Ramadi. While acknowledging he lacked any concrete evidence, he said in a briefing broadcast to reporters at the Pentagon that the attack "has all the markings of al Qaeda," such as the targeting of innocent civilians. But Johnson disagreed that insurgents were concentrating their efforts on Ramadi, the Anbar capital, saying he had seen no "notable increase" in violence there. "I don't believe Ramadi has become a focal point for the insurgency," he said. "Ramadi is not in flames." Spared major follow-up attacks Friday, Iraqis were preoccupied with recriminations on a day when it is the duty of Muslim clerics to speak to flocks of the faithful. Sunni and Shiite religious leaders condemned the week's attacks but found different causes for the escalation of violence that followed a relatively calm period after national elections on Dec. 15. "These are hands that are trying to settle old historical scores by undermining security," Ahmad Khider Abbas, a Sunni cleric, said in his sermon at the Um al-Qurra mosque in Baghdad. In Najaf, Shiite cleric Sadr Aldin Qubbanchi said the United States "gave the green light for the terrorists" when it "released terrorists from the prisons under the call for human rights." Sunni and Shiite politicians joined the fray, hurling provocative charges at one another. Sunni political groups have challenged the results of the parliamentary elections, which delivered a victory to the Shiite religious parties that lead Iraq's outgoing government. Shiites have responded by accusing some Sunni politicians of being in league with the insurgent movement. "We regret to say that some voices from the Sunni organizations contributed to and justified indirectly such attacks," Hussein Shahristani, a Shiite who is deputy chairman of Iraq's National Assembly, said in an interview. "The fact that they have called on insurgents to use violence to change the results of the elections has raised a very serious question." "I am not sure who is attacking, but I am sure that this kind of statement, this kind of cheating, will lead to violence," Saleh Mutlak, one of the country's most prominent Sunni Arab politicians, responded in a separate interview. Thousands of angry Shiites took to the streets of Sadr City, a Baghdad slum, chanting slogans against Mutlak and the U.S. presence in Iraq, the Associated Press reported. The State Department, meanwhile, issued a statement condemning the attacks. "Acts such as these serve only to deepen the pain and suffering of innocent people," the statement said. Thursday was one of the bloodiest days for the U.S. military since it invaded the country in 2003. On Friday, military authorities announced the death of six Americans in Thursday's attacks, in addition to five other service members whose deaths in a roadside bombing in Baghdad had been previously reported. Among those whose deaths were announced Friday, two of the six were killed in the suicide bombing in Ramadi. In addition, military authorities said that two Marines were killed by small-arms fire in Fallujah, and two others were killed when a roadside bomb detonated near their vehicle in Baghdad. Military authorities would not provide additional details until the soldiers' relatives could be notified. In his Pentagon briefing, the Marines' Johnson predicted that Iraqi forces would take the principal security role in Ramadi and nearby Fallujah by mid-year, and following that in western Anbar along the Euphrates River Valley. "Probably in the next four to six months, you're going to see a number of forces who will be able to take . . . increasing lead" in Fallujah and Ramadi, he said. Iraqi army forces in Anbar have tripled, he said, from two brigades last April to two divisions comprising nearly 20,000 soldiers. However, he said, the province's police forces, largely disbanded because of corruption and involvement in the insurgency, are being rebuilt. Also Friday, an Iraqi police patrol found 10 bodies dumped at a site about 20 miles southeast of Baghdad, said Capt. Ahmed Sami, a police officer with the Interior Ministry. Sami said the victims, in civilian clothes, had been blindfolded, handcuffed and shot in the head. |
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Iraq |
Suicide bombing kills 36 at Iraqi mosque |
2005-10-06 |
A suicide bomber attacked a mosque packed with Shiite Muslim worshipers marking the first day of Ramadan on Wednesday evening, killing 36 people and wounding 95, Iraqi hospital officials and police said. The Ibn Nama Hilli Mosque in Hillah, south of Baghdad, was full of mourners who had gathered to remember a restaurant owner slain Monday by insurgents. There were conflicting reports about whether the bomber was in a car or on foot, but several witnesses said a man walked into the mosque carrying explosives around his chest and in a bag. The detonation shot fire through the mosque walls and sent bodies and limbs flying into the street, where flags had been hung to celebrate Ramadan, Islam's holiest month, during which observant believers fast from dawn to dusk. The wail of ambulances rang in the streets for more than an hour as medics tried to evacuate the wounded. Ahmed Tahir, a 30-year-old neighbor of the slain restaurant owner, said he had attended the ceremony, finished his prayers and walked out into the street, where he met a friend. As they stood chatting, the mosque exploded. "This is how the terrorists inaugurated this holy month of Ramadan," Tahir said. "But God will not keep silent after this. God's revenge will be severe." The blood bath came on a day when Iraqi politicians moved to quell sectarian tensions by reversing a controversial decision that would have made it harder for Iraq's draft constitution to be defeated in a national referendum Oct. 15. Wrangling over the constitution has driven a wedge between Iraq's Sunni Arabs, many of whom oppose the charter, and Shiites and Kurds, who had the largest role in writing the text and who are campaigning for its approval. Shiites and Kurds had pushed the election rule change through the transitional National Assembly on Sunday, angering Sunnis and drawing criticism from U.N. and U.S. officials. At United Nations headquarters Wednesday, Secretary-General Kofi Annan praised the assembly's decision to rescind the rule change. "It is very important that the Iraqi parliament reversed itself, because that decision was patently inappropriate, and we made that clear to them," he said. At the crux of the conflict was how many "no" votes would be needed to defeat the constitution. The country's interim charter stated that the document would take effect if more than half the voters nationwide approved it, unless two-thirds of voters in three or more provinces rejected it. But lawmakers decided Sunday that for the draft to be defeated, two-thirds of registered voters â rather than two-thirds of those who cast ballots â in three provinces must vote against it. Saleh Mutlak, chairman of the National Dialogue Council and a leading Sunni member of the constitutional committee, complained that the change "gave a bad signal to the Iraqis, saying that this National Assembly is ready to forge and impose the constitution by force." Several assembly members said Sunnis had threatened to boycott the referendum unless the vote was reversed. Shiites and Kurds, though, have feared that violence in advance of the referendum could keep voters away from the polls, skewing the vote in favor of a "no" that they say would not represent the will of Iraq's majority. Saad Jawad, an assembly member affiliated with the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a Shiite political party, said the reversal "makes it possible for 1,000 people to defeat the constitution against the will of 10 million." But because his party is "keen that the U.N. takes part," he said, it decided to endorse the reversal at Wednesday's sparsely attended National Assembly session. Laith Kubba, a spokesman for Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari, said the move would lend credibility to the political process, even if it meant the constitution might fail. "It's more important that it has the reputation of being transparent," he said. Mahmoud Othman, a Kurdish leader, said the U.N. pressure enabled legislators to change course without appearing as though they were bowing to American or Sunni demands. "They have a good excuse â to say that the U.N. doesn't accept this and thinks it's a violation," he said. U.S., U.N. and Iraqi officials have hoped the constitution would heal the nation's political and sectarian rifts. But the skirmish over voting rules was yet another controversy that could further alienate Sunni Arabs from the political process. Their participation is seen as vital to bringing down the Sunni-led insurgency and restoring stability to the country. Annan on Wednesday acknowledged the deep rifts among Iraqis. "We had hoped that this electoral process and the transition arrangements would pull the Iraqis together," he said. "It has not worked as we had hoped, but we still urge the parties to work together, and I believe the reversal by the parliament of the decision ... would help the process." This week, the U.N. began distributing ballots, voting boxes and more than 5 million copies of the constitution around Iraq. American commanders are warning that the coming days could be even more violent than usual, especially in the capital, which averages about 28 attacks a day. "The insurgents do not want the referendum to pass, do not want the Iraqi people to adopt a new constitution," Army Maj. Gen. William G. Webster, commander of U.S.-led troops in Baghdad, said in the capital's heavily fortified Green Zone on Wednesday. "We think they will try to take advantage of this referendum by intimidating voters not to vote, through threats and actual violence." Wednesday's mosque bombing in Hillah struck a predominantly Shiite town about 60 miles south of the capital. In Najaf, a bomb killed a child and injured four people shortly after midnight. Last Thursday, Balad, another Shiite town 50 miles north of Baghdad, suffered a string of bombings that left at least 100 people dead. Webster said that U.S. commanders were particularly worried about attacks in Baghdad, which he noted was home to about a quarter of Iraq's 26 million people. "We believe that the insurgents will try to make a surge in their attacks inside Baghdad because of its value in trying to convince the people that this government cannot protect them, and also in terms of trying to make the results of the election illegitimate," he said. West of the capital, American and Iraqi forces have launched a large offensive in the Euphrates River valley, seeking to control the unruly area near the Syrian border. Sunni Arabs and others say that continuing military operations in Al Anbar province, a stronghold of insurgents in western Iraq, will hurt voter turnout in that area. Though Ramadan, which began in Iraq on Tuesday for Sunnis and Wednesday for Shiites, is a month of fasting and spiritual introspection, the insurgent group Al Qaeda in Iraq called on followers this week to step up attacks during the period. Calling for resistance against foreign occupiers, the group urged people to make Ramadan a "month of victory for Muslims and a month of defeat for the hypocrites and polytheists." Both President Bush in Washington and U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad sent Ramadan greetings to Iraqis on Wednesday before the bombing. "During Ramadan, as always, our thoughts are with the Iraqi people and our common desire for peace," Khalilzad said in a statement. "I wish the people of Iraq a peaceful, secure and prosperous Ramadan." |
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Iraq-Jordan |
Iraqi Shi'ites vow to submit constitution |
2005-08-27 |
As another midnight deadline to complete a draft constitution passed Friday without definitive agreement among Iraq's main factions, ruling Shiite Muslim parties said they would present a final version to the National Assembly this weekend with no further changes, even though it was rejected by several Sunni Arab leaders. As some lawmakers said negotiations were continuing into the early hours of Saturday and others claimed an accord had been reached that many Sunnis would endorse, government spokesman Laith Kubba told al-Arabiya television that "consensus is almost impossible at this point." "The draft should be put before the people," he said, referring to the nationwide referendum on the document that must be held by Oct. 15. Many Sunni Arab leaders have urged their followers to vote against the constitution, which can be rejected if two-thirds of the voters in at least three of Iraq's 18 provinces oppose it. The completed document will be presented to the National Assembly on Saturday or Sunday with or without Sunni backing, Humam Hamoudi, a Shiite who is chairman of the constitution-writing committee, told the Associated Press. Also Friday, the U.S. military said it launched multiple strikes with F-18 fighter jets against a house in the western town of Husaybah that local informants said was sheltering about 50 suspected insurgents from the group al Qaeda in Iraq. The military said the number of casualties had not been determined. The highly politicized process of writing Iraq's constitution revealed and reinforced deep divisions among Iraq's Shiite and Sunni Arabs and ethnic Kurds, raising fears that disagreements could spiral into factional conflict. In an attempt to foster consensus, an Aug. 15 deadline for completing a draft was postponed by one week and subsequently extended twice more. Friday's was the first deadline to pass without an official statement granting more time, as a news conference scheduled for just before midnight was canceled. In recent days, President Bush, who along with other U.S. officials had urged Iraqi leaders to complete their work on time, personally intervened by telephoning Abdul Aziz Hakim, leader of the largest Shiite political party, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, to encourage conciliation with the Sunnis. U.S. and Iraqi officials have long maintained that inclusion of the Sunni Arabs, a once-dominant minority who now make up much of the violent insurgency, is a key to stability and the eventual withdrawal of American troops. In Washington, a senior State Department official involved in Iraq policy said: "What we're witnessing is the endgame of this process. Events are moving in a positive direction. They're continuing to work these issues, but they're moving in the right direction." Deliberations bogged down Friday over two contentious issues that were as much about Iraq's troubled past as its future: whether and how to bar former members of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party from political life, and the extent and method by which to devolve power from the federal government to autonomous regions that suffered greatly under Hussein's rule. Shiites said they offered to eliminate language outlawing the Baath Party, whose top officials were mostly Sunnis, while retaining a ban on its "Saddamist" branch and symbols. They also offered to permit the National Assembly, by a majority vote, to eliminate the so-called de-Baathification committee charged with removing former party members from government service. On federalism, or the ability of Iraq's provinces to form regional governments, Shiites said they proposed enshrining the principle of federalism in the constitution while leaving the details of how federal regions should be formed to future lawmakers. Some Shiites said they had agreed to have the constitution stipulate that no new regional governments be formed for at least two years. "This is the last offer we have. We cannot go back anymore," said Nabeel Mousawi, a member of the constitution committee from the ruling Shiite alliance. "If we keep fulfilling their demands, it would be better to go back to Saddam's government, because the alliance believes that the only benefit we got from the war was to get rid of the Baath Party and to gain federal states." Sunnis, however, say that extending federalism beyond the existing Kurdish regional government in the north could lead to partition of the country. They strongly oppose a potential Shiite state in the south. "What they have proposed will only create division and disturbance," said Saleh Mutlak, a Sunni member of the constitution committee. "People should reject this constitution." Abdul Nasser Janabi, another Sunni on the committee, said: "There are many disputes that we cannot agree on. Some of their suggestions are positive, like to delay of the issue of federalism. . . . We want this issue to be postponed as a whole, but they want to postpone it in a way that guarantees it in the constitution." Despite the dissenting voices, Kurdish and Shiite leaders said as broad an agreement as possible had been reached and largely dismissed the objections of Sunnis who they said did not truly represent their communities. "I think for all intents and purposes we have a deal. We have a draft that cannot be improved upon," said Planning Minister Barham Salih, a Kurd. "No one could be entirely happy with what we have, but while some are opposed, many Sunnis expressed happiness." As factional leaders huddled in Baghdad's fortified Green Zone for talks, large crowds took to the streets across the country, a reminder that whatever the outcome of the protracted negotiations, the constitution's fate lies with the people. More than 3,000 demonstrators, many of them Sunnis opposed to the constitution, gathered in Baqubah, north of the capital. Marchers chanted Baath Party slogans and carried large posters of Hussein. Police fired shots in the air to disperse the crowd after about half an hour. In the northern city of Kirkuk, police officers and Iraqi soldiers joined about 2,000 demonstrators bearing banners that read "The Baathists are loyal Iraqis" and "No to federalism." The largest demonstrations of the day were inspired by the influential Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, who has yet to make public his opinion on the constitution but whose stated opposition to federalism mirrors that of many Sunnis. About 20,000 followers of Sadr marched in their stronghold of Sadr City, a sprawling slum in eastern Baghdad. The protest was a show of force by the movement, whose militiamen briefly battled rival Shiite fighters this week in a simmering rivalry over influence, ideology and power among the country's Shiite majority. The movement convened other demonstrations in several cities in southern Iraq, protesting a dearth of social services that remains the overwhelming complaint of most Iraqis. "We demand the addressing of the sharp lack in daily services," one banner read. |
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Iraq-Jordan |
Civil War in Iraq |
2005-08-23 |
Iraq:Does it matter if you call it a civil war? Iraq's constitution could be seen as a draft 'peace pact' for warring parties. From the August 22, 2005 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0822/p01s02-woiq.html Articles a few days old, but it is very relevant and worth reading. Interesting take, and in my recent readings, the term Civil War has come up again and again. By Dan Murphy | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor BAGHDAD - Finding a way to head off civil war is at the heart of all the major initiatives - including the talks over a new constitution - in Iraq. But by most common political-science definitions of the term, "civil war" is already here. "It's not a threat. It's not a potential. Civil war is a fact of life there now,'' says Pavel Baev, head of the Center for the Study of Civil War at the Peace Research Institute in Oslo, Norway. He argues that until the nature of the conflict is accurately seen, good solutions cannot be found. "What's happening in Iraq is a multidimensional conflict. There's international terrorism, banditry, the major foreign military presence. But the civil war is the central part of it - the violent contestation for power inside the country." What this means in practical terms, is that an immediate US withdrawal isn't likely to bring peace to Iraq, say analysts. Nor is simply "staying the course," if it isn't matched by a political peace treaty among the warring parties - a role that a new constitution, facing a midnight tonight deadline, could fill. The academic thumbnail definition of a civil war is a conflict with at least 1,000 battlefield casualties, involving a national government and one or more nonstate actors fighting for power. While the US has lost 1,862 soldiers, getting an accurate casualty count beyond that is difficult. The Iraqi government and US military say they don't keep figures on Iraqi troops or civilians killed. According to www.iraqbodycount.net, a website run by academics and peace activists, 24,865 Iraqi civilians were killed between March 2003 and March 2005. The report said that US-led forces killed 37 percent of the total. The spreadsheets in Dr. Faad Ameen Bakr's computer shed some light on the casualty rate. Baghdad's chief pathologist pulls down the death toll for Iraq's capital in July: 1,083 murders, a new record. Under Saddam Hussein, Baghdad was a violent city. But the highest murder rate before the war was 250 in one month. (By comparison, New York City with about 2 million more residents, had 572 murders in 2004, and a peak of 2,245 in 1990). The month of June, with 870 murders, was the previous record in Baghdad. In a weary monotone, Dr. Bakr explains that 680 of the victims were shot, the rest "strangled, electrocuted, stabbed, killed by blunt trauma or burned to death." The totals don't include residents killed by Baghdad's frequent car-bombings. While he won't discuss the religious background of the victims - citing the vulnerability of himself and his staff - Bakr says a growing number of victims show signs of "extreme torture" and arrive at the morgue in handcuffs or bound with the plastic ties used by the Iraqi military and police. Badr Brigades no doubt. "I wouldn't call it a civil war, but I would call it chronic instability," he says. The second part of the definition of a civil war is whether the national government is battling nonstate or other internal forces. A year ago it was common to hear Iraqi politicians say most of the fighting was resistance to US occupation, and would subside with a US military withdrawal. Today, few voice that view. "We are living in an undeclared civil war among Iraq's political groups,'' says Nabil Yunos, the head of political affairs for the Dignity Party, a Sunni party. "It's not just Sunnis that are the problem. It's the Shiites, the Kurds, it's everyone. The violence has gotten worse, and we're entering a very dangerous period." In Baghdad, "soft cleansing" is taking place in a number of mixed neighborhoods, with targeted assassinations scaring Sunnis out of some, and Shiites out of others. In the south, Shiite militias, not the new army and police, are the major power. Badr Brigades again While there is still hope that Iraq can avoid going all the way down the same tragic road that ripped apart Lebanon, a growing number of political leaders and analysts are acknowledging that a de facto state of civil war is already here. Welcome to reality In the Sunni and Shiite neighborhood of Horriya, on the western edge of Baghdad, three Shiite barbers have been killed this month by Sunni religious extremists who think it's sinful to cut men's beards. After notes were slipped under their doors that they could be next, at least half a dozen barber shops have closed, and the rest have prominently posted signs that will no longer shave beards. Sharia, so the solution here is to kill anyone with a long beard? In largely Sunni neighborhoods like Dora and Al Ghaziliya, Shiite residents have received written death threats to leave the area. Sunnis in Shiite neighborhoods say they've received similar threats from the Badr Brigade, a militia loyal to the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, one of the two big Shiite parties that now dominate the government. A Shiite doctor in Dora, who asked that his name not be used, says he's looking for a new home since a note was slipped under his door last month. "All the dirty Shiites out of Iraq, or face death!" it warned, which brought back memories of his brother, killed for political activity by the Hussein regime in the early 1990s. He says at least 15 Shiites in Dora have been killed in the last month. "We wake up with hope every day, but when the sun goes down, things are worse for us. I walk with death just because I'm a Shiite." A Sunni women in the Latifiyah neighborhood, whose husband was a government official under Hussein and was assassinated earlier this year, points to the cluster of bullet holes in her front gate and the front window of her living room. "We know the Badr Brigade has a list of Sunnis they want to kill and we're on it. They want us out of this house. And the police are working with them." They are the police dumbshit Though the allegations are unproven, many Sunni Arabs make such comments. Similarly, there's a conviction among the Shiite Arab community that Sunni insurgents are seeking to reimpose a regime like Hussein's, which favored the Sunni minority and ruthlessly suppressed Shiite political activity. Both staements are probably true Such breakdowns along confessional or ideological lines are the hallmarks of civil war and speak to why the drafters of Iraq's constitution have run up against so many problems. Mr. Baev, at the Oslo peace institute, is skeptical that a solution will be found to Iraq's current violence in any constitution that could be completed soon. "If you have major actors in a civil war who control a large part of the violence who sit down and negotiate power sharing, then you can hope that violence might subside,'' he says. "But it's very much a question of to what degree the negotiating parties control the armed formations. And in these processes, you can always have spoilers. It looks as if the Sunnis are increasingly being excluded from power-sharing arrangements." Interesting point, and this should be taken to heart, are we just negotiating with powerless idiots? At the moment, the major powers in much of Iraq are Shiite militias like the Badr Brigade, and the Peshmerga militias of the Kurds in the North. While Kurdish areas are much more peaceful than the rest of the country, residents of Kirkuk - an oil rich and ethnically mixed city that the Kurd's are claiming as a future capitol, allege they've been involved in systematically driving Arabs from their homes. "I'm amazed Kirkuk hasn't flared up yet,'' says a Western diplomat in Baghdad. "I hate to say this - but the only solution might be to simply let the people of Iraq fight it out and get so fatigued from the fighting, that they eventually reach some sort of compromise." Did someone say popcorn was ready? Kurdish leaders, who see the current constitutional debate as a potential stepping stone to autonomy, occasionally threaten pulling out of Iraq entirely if they're not satisfied by negotiations soon. "If the constitution doesn't settle the issue of Kirkuk, we could just back up and go back to the north. We know these other parties, they're just stalling until they get stronger than us in the future,'' says says Faraj al-Haydari, a senior official in the Baghdad offices of the Kurdish Democratic Party. IMHO Kurds are waiting to see what happens before succession, but they do obviously want to keep it as an open option. Saleh Mutlak, a leading Sunni on the drafting committee, says it looks to him like Shiites and Kurds are looking to cut a deal among themselves on the constitution that will leave areas they dominate with the lion's share of Iraq's resources, "something we will never allow to happen." They did worse to the Shiia, and now they expect them to play nice, Not Gonna Happen. Mr. Mutlak dismisses the dominant Shiite parties, Sciri and Dawa, as "Iranian Shiites,'' whose first loyalties aren't to Iraq Probably also a true statement . Many Sciri and Dawa activists were exiled to Iran, a Shiite theocracy, until Saddam fell. But that's not his only worry. As with many modern civil wars, its contestants have multiple enemies. Mutlak says he fears reprisals not only from Shiite militias, but from the wing of the Sunni insurgency led by the terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian militant behind many of Iraq's most devastating attacks on civilians. Mr. Zarqawi and his followers reject all participation in the political process, and are suspected to be behind the murder last week of three activists from the Iraqi Islamic Party, a Sunni group that Mutlak is close to, in the northern city of Mosul. The three were canvassing for Sunni participation in upcoming elections. The question is, does Zarq control the largest militant armsd of the Sunnis or is he just another small player? Though there has been extensive training and equipment programs for the new Iraqi army and police, few Iraqis seem to be putting much faith in them. While Sunnis complain that new forces are infiltrated by the militias of the major Shiite parties, even many Shiites prefer to rely on sectarian militias for their own protection. They don't screw with Shiia, just Sunnis Majid Jabr Faihod, for example, sits in his family's spare home in Baghdad's Sadr City neighborhood, and describes how the death of his father in May turned into a family tragedy. He stayed behind as eight family members - including three of his four brothers - took their father to be buried near the holy Shrine of Imam Ali in Najaf, a centuries-old Shiite practice. On the way there, the minibus transporting them was waylaid in Latifiyah, a Sunni insurgent stronghold. The eight men were separated from the women in the bus, and driven away, along with their father's coffin. Mr. Faihod says that all of the men were mutilated, then killed and dragged through the streets of Latifiyah, along with their father's body. "This is entirely because we're Shiite, and they hate us," says Faihod. "The armed forces are weak and can't protect us. Here in Sadr City, thank God, we can rely on the Mahdi Army." The Mahdi Army is the militia of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, and while it's been out of the headlines since fighting pitched battles with US forces last year for control of Najaf, it appears as strong as ever in Sadr City, an almost completely Shiite section of Baghdad with 2 million people. In recent weeks, Islamic vigilantes believed to be aligned with the Mahdi Army have killed a number of Sadr City residents for the crime of "immorality." In Faihod's case, the Mahdi Army paid for the family's mass funeral and provided security on the second trip to Najaf. "We believe in the old law, blood for blood,'' says Raad Faihod, the other surviving brother. "The truth has to come out, and the truth is that all of these terrorists are Sunnis and their political parties. They have to be dealt with." I believe this is the dominant opinion in both Kurdish and Shiite Iraq, and it will mean that the war will continue and expand until one group or another is destroyed. Probably the Sunnis will go the way of the dodo if things get much thicker. You reap what you sow fellas! EP |
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Iraq-Jordan |
Iraqis consider bypassing Sunnis on constitution |
2005-08-15 |
Iraqi leaders remained deadlocked Sunday over major issues in the country's new constitution, raising the possibility they would fail to meet the Monday deadline and push the country toward a political crisis. With several questions unresolved, Shiite leaders said Sunday that they were considering asking the National Assembly to approve the document without the agreement of the country's Sunni leaders. Such a move would probably provoke the Sunnis, whose participation in the political process is seen as crucial in the effort to marginalize the Sunni-dominated guerrilla insurgency. Shiite and Kurdish leaders said they were also considering giving themselves more time to reach a deal, though it was by no means certain that they could without amending the interim constitution, the law currently in force. That would require a three-fourths majority of the 275-member National Assembly. If the deadline is not met nor the interim constitution successfully amended, the law appears to require dissolving the National Assembly and holding new elections. Shiite and Kurdish leaders said late Sunday that they were discussing that possibility, but said that they hoped to avoid it. "That is the worst option, and we want to avoid it all costs," said Ali al-Dabbagh, one of the Shiite leaders charged with writing the new constitution. The negotiations were stalled on a number of issues, including the role of Islam in the state, the rights of women and the distribution of power between central and regional governments. Issues that had seemed to have been settled, like the sharing of oil revenues, came unraveled. American officials here have been pushing the Iraqis to meet the Aug. 15 deadline, arguing that any delay in the political process, devised to culminate in democratic elections in December, could risk strengthening the insurgency. A stalemate could also stall the Bush administration's plans to begin reducing the number of troops here as early as next spring. The deadlock reflected a lack of consensus on basic questions underlying the nation's identity, a consensus which has largely eluded this country since it was carved from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire after World War I. The disagreements run almost entirely along ethnic and sectarian lines, reflecting the deep divisions among Iraq's majority Shiites and the Kurdish and Sunni minorities. The principal unresolved issue is whether to grant to the country's Shiite majority an autonomous region in the south. Shiite leaders are demanding that nine provinces in southern Iraq - half of the provinces in the country - be allowed to form a largely self-governing region akin to the Kurdish autonomous region in the north. The leaders of Iraq's Sunni population staunchly oppose the Shiite demands, contending that if the Shiites and the Kurds were both granted wide powers of self-rule, there would be little left of the Iraqi state. The issue of Shiite autonomy is especially significant because the richest oil fields are situated in the extreme south of the country. Indeed, some Sunni leaders say the Shiite demand for self-rule is largely a cover for hoarding the bulk of Iraq's oil revenues. On Sunday, an agreement on sharing oil revenues between the central and regional governments fell apart, with the Shiites demanding more control. Under prodding from the American ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, the Shiites agreed to hold off on their demands for regional autonomy, in exchange for a mechanism in the constitution that would allow them to achieve that autonomy later. Under the formula favored by the Shiites, provinces could set up autonomous regions if they secured majority votes of their people, the provincial assemblies and the National Assembly. But Sunni leaders rejected that proposal, saying it would only slow down, but not significantly hamper, the Shiite drive for self-rule. While accepting Mr. Khalilzad's basic formula, the Sunnis said they would insist on two-thirds majorities in all the voting. "If we accept federalism, the country will be finished," said Saleh Mutlak, a Sunni leader on the constitutional committee. Late Sunday, after many hours of negotiating, some Shiite leaders said they were so impatient with what they described as Sunni intransigence that they began to threaten to ram the constitution through the National Assembly without Sunni support. Theoretically, at least, that was possible. Sunnis constitute only about 20 percent of the population, and they hold virtually none of the seats in the National Assembly, in part because they boycotted national elections in January. If the Shiites and the Kurds united around the proposed constitution, they could probably secure enough votes for its approval in the National Assembly, and in the nationwide constitutional referendum scheduled for Oct. 15. Under the rules agreed to last year, the Sunnis could defeat the constitution, but only if they could muster a two-thirds majority voting against it in 3 of Iraq's 18 provinces. The Sunnis are believed to constitute a majority in three provinces, but some Shiite leaders said they were untroubled by the prospect of a Sunni veto. "The Sunnis have to find a two-thirds majority, and they can't," said Sami al-Askary, a Shiite member of the constitutional committee. Pushing the constitution through without the Sunnis, though, would almost certainly bring a Sunni reaction. Sunni leaders suggested that they could back out of the political process altogether, raising the prospect of a Sunni boycott of the Oct. 15 referendum and the Dec. 15 elections. American leaders fear that failing to bring the Sunnis along into the political process would only further intensify the insurgency, which is already attacking American forces an average of 65 times a day here. As the Aug. 15 deadline approached, it was difficult to differentiate between credible threats and high-stakes bargaining. There were suggestions, for instance, that the Shiite leadership itself was not unified on the federalism question. One of the Shiite leaders, Abdul Aziz Hakim, the head of the Supreme Council for the Islamic revolution in Iraq, who was expected to attend a meeting of the top political leaders on Sunday night, surprised many when he failed to show up. Among the other questions still unresolved are the role of Islam in the state, including a proposal by the Shiites to include a political role for the Shiite religious leadership in Najaf. The power granted to Islam in the new constitution could affect the rights of women, particularly if Islamic law is allowed to govern marriage and family disputes. Iraqi leaders have still reached no agreement on the city of Kirkuk, which is divided among three ethnic groups but claimed by the Kurdish regional government. The Kurds are pushing for a timeline to reverse decades of Saddam Hussein's "Arabization" policy that would require the repatriation of tens of thousands of people. Also on Sunday, the American command announced the deaths of five American soldiers, all from roadside bombs. In the bloodiest attack, a bomb killed three American soldiers on patrol on Friday in the city of Tuz, north of Baghdad. A fourth soldier was wounded. On Sunday, another roadside bomb killed an American solider and wounded three others near the western town of Rutbah. A fifth American soldier was killed Saturday by a roadside bomb in western Baghdad, and another was wounded. The propaganda war continued as well. In a statement posted on the internet, Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia warned the Sunni clerics against urging their faithful to take part in the referendum on the constitution. The warning appears to be a reaction to the fact that many Sunni preachers, in contrast to the elections in January, are urging Sunnis to vote this time. "Be informed that this conspiracy is to get America out of the logjam that it fell into," the statement reads. "We in the Al Qaeda organization will manifest the backsliding of all who call for the writing of the constitution and arbitrating on other than God's laws." |
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Iraq-Jordan |
Sistani wants wider role for Iraqi Sunnis |
2005-06-28 |
Iraq's most powerful Shiite cleric appeared to offer a major concession to the Sunni Arab minority on Monday when he indicated that he would support changes in the voting system that would probably give Sunnis more seats in the future parliament. In a meeting with a group of Sunni and Shiite leaders, the cleric, Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, outlined a proposal that would scrap the system used in the January election, according to a secular Shiite political leader, Abdul Aziz al-Yasiri, who was at the meeting. The election had a huge turnout by Shiites and Kurds but was mostly boycotted by Sunni Arabs. Such a change would need to be written into Iraq's new constitution, which parliamentarians are drafting for an Aug. 15 deadline. Although there has been little public talk about what form elections might take under the constitution, Ayatollah Sistani has been highly influential in Iraq's nascent political system. Under the proposal, voters in national elections would select leaders from each of the 19 provinces instead of choosing from a single country-wide list, as they did in January. The new system would essentially set aside a number of seats for Sunnis roughly proportionate to their numbers in the population, ensuring that no matter how low the Sunni turnout, they would be guaranteed seats. Sunni Arabs welcomed news of the suggestion. "This should have been done from the beginning," said Saleh Mutlak, a member of the National Dialogue Council, a Sunni Arab political group that has pressed for a more active role in politics. "That election was wrong." The January elections ended in a decisive victory for Shiite Arabs and Kurds, leaving just 17 seats for Sunni Arabs in the 275-seat National Assembly. Voting in largely Sunni areas was extremely low, depressed by threats from insurgent groups who opposed the election. Also on Monday, two American soldiers were killed when their Apache helicopter crashed about 11 a.m. near Taiji, a large air base northwest of Baghdad, said Master Sgt. Greg Kaufman, a military spokesman. It was the third loss of an American helicopter in about a month. The military did not say what caused the crash. The Associated Press quoted an Iraqi witness as saying a rocket had hit it, and other witnesses heard heavy gunfire. Sergeant Kaufman could not confirm any of the details. Another American was killed Monday in central Baghdad while he helped Iraqi policemen investigate a burning car, the military said. In a Pentagon briefing on Monday, the top American commander in Iraq, Gen. George W. Casey Jr., confirmed that American and Iraqi officials had been meeting with Sunni leaders in Iraq in hopes of defusing the insurgency and drawing their followers into the political process. General Casey denied that the meetings constituted negotiations, and said he was unaware of any direct contacts with insurgent fighters. "They're discussions primarily aimed at bringing these Sunni leaders and the people they represent into the political process," he said at a briefing with Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld. "But to characterize them as negotiations with insurgents about stopping the insurgency, we're not quite there yet." Both General Casey and Mr. Rumsfeld have said there have not been any contacts with foreign fighters like the Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who is believed to be responsible for some of the most deadly suicide attacks in Iraq. The statements by Ayatollah Sistani are the latest foray into Iraqi politics by the Shiite leader. Pressure from him was a major factor in establishing an accelerated timetable for the elections in January. That pace, however, largely dictated the election's countrywide system, because United Nations organizers considered it the simplest and quickest way to organize the vote. When United Nations officials met with the ayatollah in March, he chastised them for choosing the system, and said he favored setting assembly seats aside district by district, a preference he reiterated Monday. Mr. Yasiri, the Shiite politician, said Ayatollah Sistani had characterized the January election as flawed. In the past, the ayatollah has reserved his efforts to pushing for measures, like nationwide elections, that were likely to enhance the power of Iraq's Shiite majority. His endorsement of a new voting system seemed to be made out of concern for the delicacy of the current political situation here. "He said there were a lot of mistakes," Mr. Yasiri said. "He said this election must be different than the old one. He said we prefer that all the people share in it." In other news, Iraq's foreign minister under Saddam Hussein, Tariq Aziz, in a videotape of his interrogation that was released Monday and described by Agence France-Presse, said Mr. Hussein had personally ordered the crackdown on a Shiite uprising in 1991 without consulting top aides. The testimony could help prosecutors build a case against Mr. Hussein for his trial. |
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Iraq-Jordan |
Sunnis hint at peace deal |
2005-05-15 |
The Bush administration, struggling to cope with a recent intensification of insurgent violence in Iraq, has received signals from some radical Sunni Arab leaders that they would abandon fighting if the new Shiite majority government gave Sunnis a significant voice in the country's political evolution, administration officials said this week. The officials said American contacts with what they called "rejectionist" elements among Sunni Arabs - the governing minority under Saddam Hussein, which has generated much of the insurgency, and largely boycotted January's elections - showed that many wanted to join in the political system, including the writing of a permanent constitution. But the political feuding that delayed the formation of the government for nearly three months after the elections has so far blocked the kind of concessions the Sunnis are demanding. In particular, the Americans are pressing for Shiite hard-liners in the new Iraqi government to consider conciliatory gestures that would include allowing former Baath Party members to serve in the government, granting pensions to former army officers who served under Mr. Hussein and setting up courts that would try detainees seized in the anti-insurgency drive. Many of the detainees have been held for a year or more without legal recourse. The government that took office almost two weeks ago under Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari had a faltering start, leaving several cabinet posts earmarked for Sunni Arabs vacant, then filling them with officials - including a defense minister - who were rejected by some hard-line Sunni representatives. These critics have said that the nominees, though Sunni Arabs, were effectively pawns of the two Iran-backed religious parties at the head of the Shiite alliance that won the elections and now dominates the government. The government has 35 cabinet members, 7 of them Sunnis. That makes their representation nearly proportionate; Sunni Arabs are estimated at 20 percent of Iraq's population of 25 million. But misgivings about the Sunni voice in the new cabinet were compounded this week, when the National Assembly appointed a 55-member committee to draft the constitution. The panel has a 28-member majority from the Shiite alliance, and only two Sunni Arabs - both from parties that have shown little sign of drawing broad support in the Sunni Arab population. American officials say that while some Sunni groups will never lay down their arms, others have begun to recognize that their refusal to participate in the political process was a mistake. Meanwhile, the United States, battling a seemingly intractable insurgency, has begun to forcefully press for a political solution. Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at a Pentagon news conference this week that the goal of the intensified insurgent attacks was to discredit the new government. Senior American officers in Iraq and others in the Pentagon said the latest violence, which has killed nearly 500 people so far this month, had not prompted them to change their strategy of capturing or killing insurgents, cutting off their financing, pre-empting their attacks and training more Iraqi forces. Rather, they said, the attacks reinforced their view that quelling the insurgency would also require an effective political strategy to stabilize areas where insurgents have been most active, including Baghdad and Mosul, two of Iraq's biggest cities. To that end, American officials said, the United States is urging Dr. Jaafari, the new Iraqi leader, to renew talks with a coalition of Sunni Arab groups known as the National Dialogue Council, which has links to elements in the insurgency who it says are ready to explore openings toward a political settlement. But that approach also is fraught with difficulties, partly because of doubts that the council has the influence with the insurgents that it claims, and partly because the council's leaders have been deeply angered by raids by Iraqi forces on its Baghdad offices in the past 10 days. The raids resulted in the arrests of more than a dozen people, including some who had played a role in earlier contacts with the Shiite leaders. The attitude of insurgent leaders is another unknown, not least because American officials, two years into the war, acknowledge that they have little understanding of who the leaders are, apart from Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian militant and operative of Al Qaeda who has claimed responsibility for many of the insurgents' suicide bombings, kidnappings and beheadings. In reaching out to Sunni Arab intermediaries in the past year, the American goal has been to isolate Islamic terrorists, and die-hard groups intent on restoring a semblance of the Sunni despotism of Mr. Hussein, at least some of whom are believed to have rallied around Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, a vice president under Mr. Hussein and one of the few major leaders of that era still at large. Larry Diamond, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution who was an adviser to the American occupation last year, said in an interview that those who might be willing to negotiate include some leading Sunni religious figures, as well as tribal Sunni tribal leaders and former officials in Mr. Hussein's ruling Baath Party who aspire to "reconstruct a kind of neo-Baath Party purged of Saddam's influence." "Many of these elements have been signaling for a long time that they're ready to participate if they can be given a clear place in the system," Mr. Diamond said. By boycotting the election, he added, "they shot themselves in the foot, but they're still knocking on the door." The aim of talks with the National Dialogue Council, the Americans said, would be to draw Sunni Arab leaders with credibility in their own community into the new governing structure. But the American suggestions that the Jaafari government step up its outreach to Sunni Arabs have met a prickly response. Laith Kubba, a senior aide to Dr. Jaafari, said in a telephone interview in Baghdad on Saturday that the new government's policies would not be driven by Americans. "This is not the business of the U.S.," said Mr. Kubba, who spent years of exile in the United States during the Hussein years. "They can express concerns, they can give their views when asked, but this is a process managed by Iraqis and the prime minister is on top of it. He has led the efforts to build a dialogue with the Sunnis." Still, Mr. Kubba hinted at something that has worried American officials who have maintained close contact with the new government: the potential spoiler's role adopted by senior figures in the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, known as Sciri, a religious party that is the dominant partner, with Mr. Jaafari's party, Dawa, in the new administration. Many Iraqis say Sciri's leader, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, who holds no government post, may yet prove the decisive voice on crucial policy issues - like Sunni involvement. Mr. Kubba described the Hakim group as "a mixed bag," but acknowledged that some had what he described as "a partisan mentality." Mr. Kubba said there would be efforts to draw more Sunnis into the writing of the constitution. But he stressed that that how that would happen was a matter for the 275-member National Assembly, not for the Jaafari government alone. With only 17 Sunni Arabs in the assembly, one idea under discussion is appointing consultative groups that would not have to be drawn from assembly members. The prime minister, he said, "wants a much broader participation than a small circle of deputies talking among themselves." A further point, Mr. Kubba said, was that the interim constitution laid down last year set procedures for adoption of a new constitution that establish a veto if a two-thirds majority of voters in 3 of Iraq's 18 provinces vote against it. Sunni Arabs, with heavy majorities in Salahuddin and Nineveh Provinces north of Baghdad and Anbar Province to the west, would thus have the potential to doom any constitution they disapprove of in the referendum that the interim constitution requires by Oct. 15, Mr. Kubba said. For American officials in Baghdad, the issue of the future power balance between the Shiite and Sunni communities is a powder keg. For nearly a year, Iraq has had a sovereign government, and, after the January elections, one with a popular mandate. American officials insist that they can recommend, but not command, steps that they believe will open the way to negotiations with the insurgents. "The Iraqis are going to have to figure this out for themselves," said an American official in Baghdad. "But what I'm seeing is a new willingness of people who used to be rejectionist to join the process and a new willingness by the government to talk to them that I did not see last year." But the Americans say that it is far from clear how much influence groups like the National Dialogue Council, composed of 31 Sunni groups, have on insurgent leaders - and uncertain, too, whether even the council's leaders believe in the kind of majority-rule democracy that the United States wants as its legacy in Iraq. The council's secretary general, Fakhri al-Qaisi, a Baghdad dentist with a long history of involvement in conservative Islamic groups, contests even the demographics that suggest that any majority-rule government in Iraq will have to be led by Shiites. He argues that Shiites, generally considered to be about 60 percent of the population, are actually about half that, and Sunni Arabs closer to 40 percent than 20 percent, as most Iraqi studies have suggested. After a raid on the council's offices this week, he said that the council was genuine in its desire to participate in the political process, but that its commitment had been shaken. "I think it's a scheme to wipe us out, destroy us," he said. "Their slogans about democracy are all lies." In an interview at the council's offices, which were strewn with upended furniture and emptied filing cabinets, Mr. Qaisi was contemptuous of the Sunni Arabs appointed to seats in the Jaafari cabinet after nominees put forward by the council were rejected. He described Sadoun al-Dulaimi, a former official in Mr. Hussein's government who resigned his post and fled the country, and who was named this week by Dr. Jaafari as defense minister, as a "double agent." Of the top Sunni in the government, the vice president, Sheik Ghazi al-Yawar, he added, "He hasn't protected his friends or cooperated sincerely with us in the council." Saleh Mutlak, a council member who was involved in negotiations for the cabinet posts, said in an interview that the new government would have to be "realistic" and accept that not all of the insurgents were "criminals." He said that leaders of the military wing of Sciri, the Shiite religious party led by Mr. Hakim, appeared to have been the biggest obstacle to progress in negotiations with the new government, and that Dr. Jaafari had appeared halfhearted. "We could not reach anything with him," he said. "He speaks in a vague way. He never comes to the point." |
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Iraq-Jordan |
Iraqi negotiators seek formula |
2005-04-26 |
Iraqi politicians sought points of agreement as they bargained behind closed doors Monday in an attempt to establish a government. Rather than focusing on high principles and lofty goals, participants said the subject was numbers. A Kurdish negotiating team, for example, met with a group of Sunni Arabs who were willing to join the government if they could have nine cabinet posts. Much of the discussion focused on whether this was a reasonable total and how it might be achieved, according to two participants, Saleh Mutlak, a Sunni Arab businessman, and Hoshyar Zebari, a Kurdish politician. Kurds are Sunni Muslims but are not Arabs. |
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