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Date: Thu, 29 Dec 2005 22:48:29 -0500 (EST)
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Subject: US-Shiite Struggle Could Spin out of Control

US-Shiite Struggle Could Spin out of Control

By Gareth Porter*

December 26, 2005, Inter Press News Service Agency

http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=31574

WASHINGTON The George W. Bush administration has embarked on
a new effort to pressure Iraq's militant Shiite party leaders
to give up their control over internal security affairs that
could lead the Shiites to reconsider their reliance on U.S.
troops.

The looming confrontation is the result of U.S. concerns
about the takeover of the Interior Ministry by Shiites with
close ties to Iran, as well as the impact of officially
sanctioned sectarian violence against Sunnis who support the
insurgency. The Shiite leaders, however, appear determined to
hold onto the state's organs of repression as a guarantee
against restoration of a Baathist regime.

The new turn in U.S. policy came in mid-November, when the
administration decided to confront Prime Minister Ibrahim al-
Jaafari publicly over the torture houses being run by Shiite
officials in the Ministry of Interior at various locations in
Baghdad.

The decision was not the result of a new revelation, because
the U.S military command and U.S. Embassy had known about
such torture houses for months, from reporting by U.S.
military officers.

U.S. Army doctor Maj. R. John Stukey told the Christian
Science Monitor that he and U.S. military police had visited
Interior Ministry detention facilities and had reported
evidence of torture and other mistreatment at those
facilities up through the chain of command before he left
Baghdad in June. Washington had nevertheless remained silent
about the issue.

However, the U.S. military raided an Interior Ministry's
detention centre in the Baghdad suburb of Jadriya on Nov. 13,
whereupon the U.S. Embassy and U.S. Command issued an unusual
joint statement calling the torture centre "totally
unacceptable".

The embassy then used the torture house revelation to issue a
public demand that the militant Shiite parties give up their
power over the key state security organs. On Nov. 17, the
embassy said, "There must not be militia or sectarian control
or direction of Iraqi Security Forces, facilities or
ministries."

Shiite leaders viewed these U.S. moves as part of an effort
to reduce the majority controlled by the Shiite United Iraqi
Alliance (UIA) in the parliament and to increase the vote for
former interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a secular Shiite
and former Baathist who has been a long-time collaborator
with the Central Intelligence Agency.

As early as August, Prime Minister Jaafari and other leaders
of the main Shiite party, the Supreme Council for Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), had passed the word to their
party members that the United States was trying to paralyse
the government in order to bring Allawi back to power in the
December elections.

When Allawi was interim prime minister in 2004-2005, he
battled with militant Shiite party leaders over their push
for radical de-Baathification and secret Iranian financing of
SCIRI and Dawa candidates and the Iranian- trained Badr
paramilitary units. Before last January's elections, Allawi's
defence minister, Hazim al-Shaalan, publicly referred to the
Shiite United Iraqi Alliance slate as the "Iranian list".

The administration shared Allawi's views on Iranian covert
involvement in Iraqi politics but chose not to comment
explicitly about it in public, sparing the new Shiite
government embarrassment. Referring to Iran-Iraq relations
last May, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice deplored "undue
influence in the country through means that are not
transparent".

Shortly before the recent parliamentary election, however, a
U.S. official raised the issue explicitly on the record for
the first time. Gen. George W. Casey complained in an
interview with Knight-Ridder that the Iranians were "putting
millions of dollars into the South to influence elections...
funded primarily through their charity organisations and also
Badr and some of these political parties."

Casey also referred to members of the Badr militia, who have
entered the Interior Ministry units and the military in large
numbers, as "their guys".

As the ballots were being cast on Dec. 15, Khalilzad
indicated clearly that the United States wanted much broader
power sharing in the next government. "Since no single party
will have a majority, there will be a need for a very broad-
based coalition," he said.

The embassy apparently hoped that the UIA would get fewer
seats and Allawi more seats in the next parliament,
increasing the pressure on the Shiite parties to negotiate a
broad coalition government including both Allawi and Sunni
representatives.

On Dec. 19, Khalilzad again signaled the U.S. determination
to force the SCIRI leadership to yield control over the
security organs of the government. "You can't have someone
who is regarded as sectarian?as minister of the interior," he
said.

The initial returns indicated a stronger showing for the UIA
than the embassy had expected, and a weaker showing for
Allawi than in the January elections. Allawi now appears to
be eliminated from negotiations on high-level jobs in the
administration.

Nevertheless, Khalilzad still has the Kurdish card to play.
The UIA will need the support of the Kurds to form a new
government, and the Kurds, whose military alliance with the
United States is central to their political strategy, have
now signaled that they will demand the inclusion of Sunni
representatives in the government.

At a meeting with Khalilzad on Sunday, Pres. Jalal Talabani,
a Kurd, said, "Without the Sunni parties there will be no
consensus government... [and] without consensus government
there will be no unity, there will be no peace." Kurdish
negotiators are also likely to insist that the Shiites give
up control over the Interior Ministry.

The last time the UIA was in the process of trying to form a
government after the first parliamentary election in January,
Kurdish demands played a major role in delaying the formation
of the new government for three months. That Kurdish
negotiating strategy dovetailed with U.S. efforts to exert
pressure on Shiite leaders to allow former Baathist officers
to keep leading positions in the military and Ministry of
Interior.

When the SCIRI leadership refused to back down on control
over the Interior Ministry, the Bush administration relented
rather than create a political crisis. This time, however,
the stakes are higher. If sectarian violence continues to
worsen, the White House risks a collapse of political support
at home. And the administration has already warned publicly
that it will not accept a continuation of the status quo.

For Shiite party leaders, U.S. pressure to share state power
with secular or Sunni representatives -- especially on
internal security -- touches a raw nerve. They regard control
over the organs of state repression as the key to maintaining
a Shiite regime in power.

If Abdul Aziz al-Hakin and other SCIRI leaders feel they have
to choose between relying on U.S. military protection and the
security of their regime, they are likely to choose the
latter. They could counter U.S. pressures by warning they
will demand a timetable for withdrawal of U.S. troops if the
United States continues to interfere in such politically
sensitive matters.

That would not be an entirely idle threat. Last October,
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani was reported by associates to be
considering such a demand. The implication of calling for a
relatively rapid U.S. withdrawal would be that the Shiite
leaders would turn to Iran for overt financial and even
military assistance, in line with their fundamental foreign
policy orientation.

The Bush administration's strategy of pressure on Shiite
leaders over the issue of control over state security organs
thus has the potential to spin out of control and cause
another policy disaster in Iraq and the entire Middle East.
_____

*Gareth Porter is an historian and national security policy
analyst. His latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of
Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in June.
(END/2005)

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