New York Sun
Editorial
April 1, 2003
Powell's Pachachi

Speaking to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee on Sunday evening,
Secretary Powell vowed, "once they are liberated, we will work with the
Iraqi people to help them create a country that is peaceful, democratic, and
unified, living in peace with its neighbors." It's an appealing vision. But
while Mr. Powell has publicly been proclaiming it, his top aides have been
privately working to undermine it.

On Saturday, for instance, a group of about 300 free Iraqis - with State
Department encouragement - held a meeting in London to launch a new
opposition group called "Independent Iraqis for Democracy." Even at this
late stage, the IID's founding is significant because it represents the
fruition of years of effort by the CIA and State Department to create a
counterweight to Iraq's most prominent opposition activist, Ahmad Chalabi,
and his umbrella organization, the Iraqi National Congress. Mr. Chalabi is
now in Northern Iraq playing a constructive role.

Mr. Chalabi has been on the outs with the CIA and State for years. The
animosity goes back to 1996, when Mr. Chalabi warned then-CIA director John
Deutch that a coup plot to take out Saddam had been infiltrated by Saddam's
agents. His warnings were ignored, the coup attempt went ahead anyway, and
Langley was left with egg on its face.

State dislikes Mr. Chalabi because it can't control him and he doesn't fit
its mold for an Iraqi leader. Whereas Foggy Bottom would be content with a
kinder, gentler dictator to maintain "stability" in the region in the
post-Saddam era, Mr. Chalabi is an unabashed democrat with a clear distaste
for the Middle East status quo. Now Mr. Chalabi's detractors, desperate to
find a last-minute alternative, have found their man: Adnan Pachachi.

Mr. Pachachi, an 80-year-old former Iraqi foreign minister and ambassador to
the United Nations who has been living in exile in the United Arab Emirates,
has played no formal role in the Iraqi opposition movement, despite attempts
to woo him in the 1990s by former State Department and National Security
Council official Martin Indyk and more recently by Zalmay Khalilzad,
President Bush's special envoy to the Iraqi opposition.

Mr. Pachachi is an anti-Chalabi: A Sunni Muslim (Mr. Chalabi is a Shiite);
an anti-American (Mr. Chalabi supports the Bush position), and an Arab
nationalist (Mr. Chalabi is a secular liberal). And Mr. Pachachi's new
group, the IID, is diametrically opposed to the INC on the basic issues:
Whereas the INC favors the war, the IID opposes it, hoping instead that
Saddam will leave on his own. And while the INC is skeptical of post-war
involvement by the United Nations, Mr. Pachachi wants an interim Iraqi
government to be led by the U.N. with the help of "Iraqi technocrats."

For a sampling of Mr. Pachachi's views, here are some choice excerpts from
his personal memoirs, "Iraq's Voice at the United Nations, 1959-1969: A
Personal Record" (Quartet Books, 1991):

. "I have always retained a soft spot for Khrushchev because of his
wholehearted support for the Arab position." (p. 11)

. "Many would say it is a pipedream, but.I hope I may live to see the time
when Iraq and Syria are united in one great Arab state. " (p. 172)

. On the establishment of Israel: "This basic injustice was so glaring and
obvious that after 60 years I am still unable to accept it." (p. 19)

. "With the exception of Eisenhower's noble stand against the
Anglo-Franco-Israeli aggression in 1956, United States policies in the Arab
Near East have been an unmitigated disaster for the Arabs." (p. 12)

. "The Arab position has been greatly weakened as a result of the conclusion
by Egypt of a separate peace with Israel."(p. 167)

. "From 1961 until I left the U.N. in 1969 I was mainly concerned with the
Palestine question." (p. 12)

. "I was known in Kuwait, from my stout defense of Iraq's claim in the
Security Council in 1961 and my successful efforts to prevent the admission
of Kuwait to U.N. membership from 1961 to 1963." (p. 88)

Mr. Pachachi only renounced his 40-year-old view that Kuwait had no right to
independence in 1999.

Given Mr. Bush's ambitious policy to create a democratic Iraq followed by
further liberalization in the Arab world, Mr. Pachachi doesn't appear to be
the kind of guy suited to carry out that mission.

Mr. Pachachi also appears to have forged an alliance with Laith Kubba, an
Iraqi intellectual who is also in the anti-Chalabi camp. Mr. Kubba is an
officer at the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington, and was
formerly a member of the radical Al-Dawa party. He recently formed his own
organization, the Iraqi National Group, which appears to have now merged
with the IID.

Even as this new group is set up, $7 million in funding due to the Iraqi
National Congress is being held up due to a State Department-concocted
technicality, hamstringing the group's efforts to assist coalition forces in
the war to liberate their country. Senator Brownback and the former House
speaker, Newt Gingrich, have called for that money to be released.

That these kinds of games are still being played at this stage bodes ill for
President Bush's Iraq policy. And that America is still wooing characters
like Adnan Pachachi is ammunition to all those, both in America and abroad,
who doubt that Mr. Powell is serious when he speaks of transforming Iraq
into "a country that is peaceful, democratic, and unified, living in peace
with its neighbors."

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