Some Sunnis Hint at Peace Terms in Iraq, U.S. Says   
'in rest sauzimdebine'
http://pws.cablespeed.com/~minut/mh/index.html

By STEVEN R. WEISMAN and JOHN F. BURNS
Published: May 15, 2005

WASHINGTON, May 14 - 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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