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http://snipurl.com/ctkl

With a Shiite coalition set to take power in Iraq, American officials have
begun grilling top Iraqi Shiite politicians to try to gauge the extent of
their relationship with neighboring Iran, a predominantly Shiite nation
ruled by its clergy.  The nature of the Shiite coalition's ties to Iran
has become a crucial issue now that the cleric-backed alliance has emerged
as the leading faction in the new Iraqi parliament and at a time when the
United States and Iran are engaged in a war of words over Iran's nuclear
program...

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http://snipurl.com/ctki

Sunday, February 13, 2005
Shiites, Kurds, win Big
Bush Loses Election in Iraq

Some key election results are now being reported for Iraq. The statistics
available point to about 8.5 million voters out of an eligible 14 million.
The electoral commission said that the turnout was 58 percent.

The Sunni Arabs (20 percent of the population and the former ruling group)
mostly did not come out to vote. Only 2 percent voted in Anbar province,
where Fallujah and Ramadi are. (Remember Condoleeza Rice talking about
people voting in Fallujah? That was propaganda pure and simple.) In
Ninevah province about 17 percent of the population voted, but a lot of
those were Kurds and Turkmen. The list of old-time Sunni Arab nationalist
Adnan Pachachi, the Independent Democrats, only received 17,000 votes, not
enough to seat him or any of his other party members in parliament.
Interim President Ghazi al-Yawir's Iraqiyun list got less than 2 percent
and probably will only get 4 or 5 seats in the 275-member parliament.
Al-Yawir is from the largely Sunni Shamar tribe.

The Association of Muslim Scholars (Sunni fundamentalists) disputed the
fairness of the election and the accuracy of the returns. Nearly half of
the electorate did not vote (AMS said a majority but this is wrong), and
security was so bad that candidates had to remain anonymous, casting doubt
on the democratic nature of the process.

The three big winners were the United Iraqi Alliance (about 48 percent),
the Kurdistan alliance (26 percent) and the Iraqiyah list of interim prime
minister Iyad Allawi (about 13 percent). These three account for 88
percent of the seats in parliament, or so. The other eleven percent go to
tiny parties like that of al-Yawir, the Sadrists (Cadres and Chosen List)
and the Communists.

Although Allawi's list is among the three with more than two digits, in
fact he lost big. Allawi had all the advantages of incumbency. He
dominated the air waves in December and January. He went to Baghdad
University and made all sorts of promises to the students there and it was
dutifully broadcast, and there were lots of photo ops like that. Allawi's
list also spent an enormous amount on campaign advertising. The source of
these millions is unknown, since Paul Bremer passed a law making
disclosure of campaign contributions unnecessary (the Bush
administration's further little contribution to "democracy" in the Middle
East). Despite these enormous advantages, clear American backing, money,
etc., Allawi's list came in a poor third and clearly lacks any substantial
grass roots in most of the country. It seems to have been the refuge of
what is left of the secular middle class.

Allawi's defeat (he will not be prime minister in the new government) is a
huge defeat for the Bush administration, though it will not be reported
that way in the corporate media.

The system is set up so that a two-thirds majority is necessary to form a
government. The United Iraqi Alliance needs to pick up 18 percent or about
50 seats to go forward. The easy place to get those 50 seats is from the
Kurds, who have 70 or so. This step will require that substantial
concessions be made to the Kurds, who want the presidency, a redrawing of
the provincial map of Iraq to creat a united Kurdistan province, and
substantial provincial autonomy or "states rights."

The US now hopes to use the Kurds to blunt the push for Islamic law from
the UIA. This is the significance of Allawi's visit to Jalal Talabani of
the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and his support for Talabani as
president. The Kurds and Allawi together control nearly 40 percent of
seats in parliament. They can be outvoted on many issues, but they can't
be ignored. Allawi is trying to ensure that Talabani's position is
unassailable and to pressure the UIA to give up its own candidates for
president, so as to block any rush to Islamic law.

Ironically, Talabani is extremely close to Tehran and has been a client of
the Iranians for many years. His alliance with the UIA will ensure warm
relations between the new Iraq and Iran. The US, in pushing for Talabani
for Iraqi domestic reasons, is creating a Baghdad-Tehran axis in regional
politics.

Although a two-thirds majority is required to form the government, it is
not clear that it is required for anything else in ordinary parliamentary
life. Most measures can probably be passed with 51 percent. The only other
situations for which the interim constitution specifies that more than a
majority is needed are in over-ruling a presidential veto and in removing
and replacing the president. This stipulation would mean that on some laws
and other measures, the United Iraqi Alliance could have its way in
parliament by just picking up 3 percent of the seats via an alliance with
smaller parties such as the Sadrists. So although they need the Kurds at
first, they may not always need them subsequently.

The United Iraqi Alliance will press hard for implementation of Islamic
law. Although this move will be a hard sell in the national parliament
because the Kurds don't want it, one possible compromise would be to let
individual provinces make the decision, as in Nigeria.

The Boston Globe cannily points out that the new assembly is open to
criticism by Iraqi nationalist groups such as the Sadrists. It writes of
Sadr spokesman Ali Sumaysim:


        ' Smesim also has started taking broadsides at SCIRI and the Da'wa 
Party,
the two mainstream Shi'ite parties that form the cornerstone of the
United Iraqi Alliance. ''SCIRI has one foot in Iran and one in America.
The Da'wa has one foot in Iran and one in Britain," he said. ''Both are
like old men creeping toward their graves." There are also leading
clerics not affiliated with Sadr, such as Ayatollah Mohammed Yacoubi, who
are pressuring Shi'ite parties to take a more religious position.
Yacoubi's top aide, Sheik Abbas Khalifa, explained at the cleric's
headquarters in Najaf that nothing in the new constitution should
contradict Islamic law -- including inheritance laws, which he said must
grant sons twice as much as daughters. ''We don't want to see equality
between men and women," he said. ''This is from the Koran, from God." '


The Sadrists are important in several provincial governments and will
represent a small swing vote in parliament. To the extent that they vote
with the UIA, they could well help give the latter a majority in
parliament on some votes. But their center of power remains the festering
slums of the south, representing a well of bio-power that could yet be
deployed for extra-parliamentary political purposes if the new government
continues to disappoint Iraqi expectations on security and economic
issues. The Sadrists are divided on how closely to support the son of the
founder of their movement, Muqtada al-Sadr, but they are united in wanting
an Islamic government.

I just saw Ahmad Chalabi on CNN declaring his candidacy for prime
minister. It is hard for me to see how he could get the post, since the
big winners in the election are the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution
in Iraq and the Dawa Party, and they would have prior claim on the post.
Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress only has ten seats in parliament. The
only way Chalabi could become PM is if all the members of parliament were
heavily bribed (by Iran?). Even then, it is hard to see how SCIRI and Dawa
could be mollified over the loss of a post they believe to be rightfully
theirs. Chalabi is an operator, and may get a cabinet post or a committee
chairmanship. I doubt he will get more than that.

Meanwhile, as anonymous MPs begin to make deals about a country they don't
control, Rory McCarthy reminds us what the real Iraq is like as he
prepares to leave Baghdad after two years. The humiliation of foreign
military occupation and the reality of massive guerrilla violence seem to
him foremost in the minds of most Iraqis.

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