Gen. Tommy Franks To Rule
Iraq By Cameron
W. Barr Staff Writer - The Christian Science Monitor 2-13-3
- SULAYMANIYAH, IRAQ
- The head of the US military's Central Command, Gen. Tommy Franks, will
rule Iraq in the initial aftermath of a US invasion to overthrow
President Saddam Hussein.
-
- Administration officials briefed senators Tuesday on
postwar planning, stressing that the US goal is "to liberate Iraq, not
to occupy it," and last week a US envoy told leaders of Iraqi groups
opposed to Hussein about American intentions.
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- The senators were told that even under good
circumstances, it would take two years before the military could fully
transfer control to an Iraqi government. As presented, the plan recalls
postwar Germany and Japan, where American military occupations paved the
way for transfers of power to democratic and constitutionally backed
governments.
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- Some Iraqi opposition leaders are already attacking
the plan, saying it amounts to a US military rule of Iraq that will
favor the existing power structure in the country. Instead of turning
Iraq into a beacon of democracy in the Middle East, an ambition
articulated by some US policymakers, the opposition leaders say the US
plan seems designed to ease the fears of Arabs and Turks unhappy with
the prospect of a democratic, federal Iraq.
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- But Barham Salih, prime minister of an enclave in
northern Iraq controlled by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK),
advises a pragmatic view of the US plan. "Let's not get too hot about
this," he said late Tuesday in an interview at his home here. "Who is
doing the heavy lifting?"
-
- The answer is, of course, the US, and Mr. Salih's
implication is that shouldering the big load brings with it a few
prerogatives. He maintains an eyes-on-the-prize approach to the debate
over how to run Iraq's affairs immediately after the current leader is
removed: "The key thing for us is getting rid of Saddam Hussein."
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- Some elements of Iraq's fractious opposition,
including groups funded by the US, have been determined to form a
government-in-waiting in order to ensure that Iraq's sovereignty stays
in Iraqi hands. They argue that Iraqis will see even a temporary US
administration of Iraq as occupation, engendering anti-American
sentiment throughout the Middle East.
-
- Even so, the US has decided to run the country itself,
although the structure outlined to Congress and the opposition groups
envisions a "consultative council" of Iraqis selected by the US to
advise American administrators.
-
- "To be kind, it is unworkable. Either reason will
prevail, or time will demonstrate to the authors [of the US plan] the
error of their ways," says Iraqi National Congress leader Ahmed Chalabi.
"I really shudder to think."
-
- A US civilian coordinator, retired Lt. Gen. Jay
Garner, is already presiding over committees of US bureaucrats preparing
to address humanitarian relief, reconstruction, and civil administration
- all part of a planning effort authorized by President Bush on Jan. 20.
General Franks retains overall responsibility for a war and its
aftermath.
-
- Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith told the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Tuesday that "Central [Iraqi]
government ministries could remain in place and perform the key
functions of government after the vetting of the top personnel to remove
any who might be tainted with the crimes and excesses of the current
regime."
-
- This formula sounds to some Iraqi opposition leaders
as though much of Iraq's existing power structure, dominated by
Hussein's ruling Baath Party, will maintain its role. "Power is being
handed, essentially on a platter, to the second echelon of the Baath
Party and the [Iraqi] Army officer corps," says Kanan Makiya, an adviser
to Mr. Chalabi who discussed postwar Iraq with President Bush on Jan.
10. "It's going to have the opposite effect to what US wants it to
have," he adds.
-
- The US plan also imagines, in Feith's words, a
"Constitutional commission ... to draft a new Constitution and submit it
to the Iraqi people for ratification."
-
- Zalmay Khalilzad, the US envoy to the Iraqi
opposition, briefed leaders of three groups opposed to Hussein about the
plan in Ankara, Turkey, last week. In interviews here, Chalabi and Mr.
Makiya said they were unable to attend because the US gave them just 18
hours' notice, but added that they have been told about the discussions
from opposition figures who participated.
-
- Mr. Khalilzad met with the two Kurdish parties - the
Kurdistan Democratic Party and the PUK - that administer areas of
northern Iraq outside Hussein's control. A leader of the Iran-backed
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), which
represents major elements of the country's Shiite community, also took
part in the Ankara meetings.
-
- Both Kurds and Shiites rebelled unsuccessfully against
Hussein after the Gulf war, thinking the US would defend them. Instead
the US stood back as Hussein crushed the uprisings. But for more than a
decade US and British warplanes have kept Iraqi planes from flying over
both areas, a limitation that has offered Kurds, in northern Iraq, and
Shiites, in the south, some protection from Hussein's military.
-
- The Kurds and Shiites are important to the US in part
because both have men under arms. But they are also groups that may pose
complexities.
-
- Long disenfranchised by Hussein, despite their
majority status, the Shiites want to see a more just distribution of
power in a new Iraq. This desire makes the US wary, since SCIRI, the
main Shiite group, is supported by Iran's theocratic rulers. The US
would like Iran's role in Iraq kept to a minimum.
-
- Makiya asserts that installing a US military ruler "is
certified, guaranteed to make [SCIRI leader Ayatollah Mohammed Bakr
al-Hakim] a major player in Iraq because he's gong to run in ...
elections, along with the rest of the opposition, on an anti-occupation
platform."
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- The Kurds want at least to preserve the de facto
autonomy they have gained over the past decade, and have insisted that
the new Iraq adopt a federal system of government. But federalism makes
Turkey anxious, on the theory that an autonomous Kurdish area in a
federal Iraq might inspire Turkey's Kurds to seek something similar. The
Turks have relentlessly suppressed Kurdish nationalism.
-
- At the same time, Turkish cooperation is an important
feature of US war planning, which may explain why US officials "told the
Kurds to be very, very careful and very realistic about federalism," in
Chalabi's rendition of events in Ankara.
-
- Rather than allying itself with Iraq's opposition, an
ambitious and fractious collection of exiles and dissidents, the US
seems to be gambling that large segments of the Iraqi establishment will
cooperate in a American-led effort to rehabilitate the country and
reform its political system. Makiya says with evident disappointment
that years of collaborative effort with US officials - including US
funding, an act of Congress promoting Iraq's "liberation," and a
"democratic principles working group on Iraq" backed by the State
Department - are "all down the drain."
-
- But the US approach may increase the comfort level of
some US friends in the Arab world, who preside over autocratic regimes
and who may be uneasy with an effort to create a Western-style democracy
in their midst.
-
- "What concerns us a lot," Chalabi says, "is the
perception of the Arab governments and their friends in Washington about
the effect Iraq could have by its example on the future of the Arab
world."
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- http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0213/p01s03-woiq.html
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The Mulindwas
communication group "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in
anarchy"
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