Making Sense of Iraq's Vote

Makkonnen said:
Those Kurds are stupid they will fuck around and have the the Shiites on their ass along with Iran and Turkey and when the US pulls out with their tails between their legs they'll be worse off than with Saddam around. I can see the Sunni and Shiites makin a deal for more representation and violence go away without the US involved but the Kurds won't get shit- the US can't force the Iraqis to accept those muthafuckas havin so much power especially with the fuckin Kurds being so buddy buddy with uncle sam

Here's my question: Does the US intend to pull out or maintain a permanent military presence in Iraq? Is the US willing to leave Iraq to the Iraqis given our investment? If democracy was the goal we could have exited after elections, but a timetable still doesn't exist; is it after the drafting a Constitution or after Iraq can police itself, a prospect that looks more and more unlikely everyday? If preventing Iraq from becoming a terrorist jump off spot or haven is the exit point, then we've seem to deliberately or incompetently created a situation were that will not occur.
 
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Talks on Iraq Government Fail Before Parliament
By Khaled Yacoub Oweis

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraq (news - web sites)'s leading parties said on Sunday they had failed to reach a deal to form a new government before the first meeting of parliament, crushing hopes a much-needed cabinet would start to tackle relentless violence.

Iraqi Deputy President Rowsch Shways said talks between the Shi'ite alliance that won landmark elections and Kurds who came second would resume after parliament's opening session on Wednesday to hammer out differences.

"The talks will continue and there are some important points that deserve more discussion," Fouad Massoum, a Kurd and interim parliamentary speaker, said in the northern city of Arbil.

Some of his party's members were less optimistic. Kurdish leader Masoud Barzani's chief aide said: "The negotiations between the two sides have hit a dead end."

Parliament's meeting Wednesday will take place more than six weeks after polls that gave many in Iraq hope a new authority would clamp down on suicide attacks, car bombs and execution-style killings by mainly Sunni Arab insurgents.

Four bodies, three Iraqi soldiers and one policeman, were found on a farm in Latafiya, some 70 km (40 miles) south of the capital. An army officer said they had been shot in the head and chest two days ago. Their hands had been tied.

POLITICAL VACUUM

Many Iraqis blame politicians, for whom they say they risked their lives to vote in the Jan. 30 elections, for prolonging a political vacuum while violence spirals.

Officials said earlier the two sides had yet to agree on how to distribute top government posts and on extending the Kurds' autonomous region in the north.

Ahmad Chalabi, a top member of the Shi'ite bloc, the United Iraqi Alliance, returned empty handed Saturday from a trip to Iraqi Kurdistan to save the proposed Kurdish-Shi'ite alliance which has the two-thirds majority needed to form a government.

"The meetings have collapsed. There was no deal," an aide to Chalabi told Reuters.

Kurdish politicians were defiant, rejecting the Shi'ite alliance's attempts to blame them for the deadlock.

"They want to lay the responsibility for the political equation solely on the Kurdish side," Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, a Kurd, told Al Arabiya television.

The Kurds, who number about 3 million out of Iraq's 27 million people, want the presidency for Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani, and a top ministry -- interior, finance or defense.

They also want their share of oil revenue to rise to 25 percent from 17 percent now, and the inclusion of the northern oil industry hub of Kirkuk in the Kurdistan federal region.

ALLAWI CARETAKER ROLE

The standoff plays into the hands of interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, whose cabinet could now remain in a caretaker role until a general election due at the end of the year.

Sunni Arabs, dominant under Saddam, largely boycotted the election and have little representation in the new assembly.

Insurgents have staged ever bolder raids on Shi'ite and government targets in a drive to topple the U.S.-backed administration and stall efforts to form a new cabinet.

In the deadliest recent attack, a suicide bomber struck a Shi'ite mosque during a funeral Thursday, killing at least 50 people and wounding dozens more. A little-known Sunni Muslim group claimed responsibility for the attack on the Internet.

The group, Jamaat Jund al-Sahaba (Soldiers of the Prophet's Companions), vowed to carry out attacks against Shi'ites it described as "rejectionists" and not real Muslims.

The statement's authenticity could not be verified.

Saturday, a suicide car bomber at a checkpoint in Sharqat south of Mosul killed six Iraqi soldiers. Regional army commander Lieutenant-Colonel Talal Mohammed said Sunday the army had arrested a Yemeni in connection with the attack.

In Mosul, a U.S. soldier was killed by small arms fire on Friday, the American military said, and Saturday a roadside bomb killed two U.S. contractors south of Baghdad.

The Association of Muslim Clerics, a leading Sunni group, complained Sunday U.S. troops had searched the home of its leader for the second time in a week.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=578&ncid=578&e=3&u=/nm/20050313/ts_nm/iraq_dc
 
<font size="6"><center>Kurd Leaders Say They're Near Shiite Deal</font size></center>
<font size="4"><center>Kurdish Leaders Say They're Nearing Completion on
Power-Sharing Deal With Shiite-Led Alliance</font size></center>

feature_txt_filler_ap.gif

By PATRICK QUINN Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq Mar 13, 2005 — Kurdish leaders said they were near a final agreement Sunday with the majority Shiites to form a coalition government when Iraq's first democratically elected parliament in modern history convenes later this week.

Further talks are slated in Baghdad on Monday. The deal calls for Jalal Talabani, a Kurdish leader, to be named president. Conservative Islamic Dawa party leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari, of the Shiite majority, would become prime minister.

But as the country neared a political landmark many hoped would set the stage for an eventual U.S. withdrawal, two American security contractors were killed and a third was wounded in a roadside bombing south of Baghdad.

The three worked for Blackwater Security, a North Carolina-based firm that provides security for U.S. State Department officials and facilities in Iraq. They were attacked on the main road to Hillah, south of Baghdad, according to Bob Callahan, a U.S. Embassy spokesman.

In Mosul, 225 miles north of Baghdad, U.S. and Iraqi troops killed five insurgents in street fighting, the military said. Three other people, a woman and two children, were killed inadvertently when an American helicopter gunship fired at insurgents, according to Mosul's Al-Jumhuri Teaching Hospital.

The military said at least five Iraqis were wounded in the incident, which occurred when a patrolling helicopter was fired on by insurgents in four cars. The U.S. helicopter returned fire, destroying three of the cars, and U.S. officials said the incident was under investigation.

Also Sunday, French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin reported new contact and information about the kidnapped French journalist Florence Aubenas and Hussein Hanoun al-Saadi, her Iraqi interpreter. Raffarin said the new contacts gave hope the Liberation newspaper reporter could be freed. Aubenas and her translator were kidnapped in Baghdad on Jan. 5.

Liberation director Serge July visited Baghdad's Um al-Qura mosque, which serves as headquarters of the Association of Muslim Scholars, an influential organization of Sunni clerics. Sunni Arabs make up the bulk of Iraq's insurgency.

In protest against insurgent violence, a small group of about 50 Shiites demonstrated outside Jordan's embassy after reports that the suicide bomber who killed 125 people in a Feb. 28 attack in Hillah was Jordanian. The protesters burned at least one Jordanian flag.

The political developments Sunday occurred outside the northern Iraqi city of Irbil, a Kurdish enclave, where leaders of the minority said they were working out final details on a coalition government in accordance with a deal reached earlier this month with the Shiite-dominated United Iraqi Alliance.

The two camps are to formalize their agreement Monday, two days before the National Assembly convenes for the first time since Jan. 30 elections.

"The basic Kurdish demands are not about the Kurds only but the whole of Iraq, we are working for an Iraqi process a coalition government that respects the constitution," said Interim Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh, a Kurd.

Interim Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, also a Kurd, said a Kurdish delegation was to meet with the alliance again on Monday before the deal is announced, emphasizing that a final agreement was close.

The Kurds won 75 seats in the 275-member National Assembly during Jan. 30 elections. The alliance won 140 seats and needs Kurdish support to assemble the two-thirds majority to elect a president, who will then give a mandate to the prime minister.

In other violence reported Sunday, a U.S. soldier was gunned down late the day before in an insurgent attack in Mosul.

The death brought to at least 1,514 the number U.S. military personnel lost since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

Foreign contractors, too, are often targeted by anti-U.S. guerrillas. At least 232 American civilian security and reconstruction contractors were killed in Iraq up to the end of 2004, according to the Washington-based Brookings Institution.

The Blackwater employees killed Saturday were in the last vehicle in a four-vehicle convoy and were traveling to Hillah from Baghdad. The road crosses an area known as the "Triangle of Death" because of the frequency of insurgent attacks.

State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the contractors were assigned to protect American diplomats.

"We will always remember their courage, dedication, and ultimate sacrifice for their country in the name of freedom," he said.

Blackwater Security said it was withholding their names out of respect for their families.

In other violence, two Iraqis were killed and five injured in a roadside bombing intended for a U.S. convoy in southeast Baghdad on Sunday, said Dr. Ali Karim at Kindi hospital.

In Sharqat, 160 miles northwest of Baghdad, a suicide car bomber detonated his vehicle on Saturday outside the house of the town's chief of special police forces, said police Col. Jassim al-Jubouri. The chief was not harmed, but four people were killed and several others were injured.


Associated Press writers Rawya Rageh, Sameer N. Yacoub and Qasim Abdul-Zahra in Baghdad and Yahya Barzanji in Kirkuk contributed to this report.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=577140&page=1

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tehuti said:
Maybe so, but what are you basing that on. Are there any specific developments that you know of?
no, specfic development. just a default positivity that makes it so i have to be convinced that all is lost rather than the other way around.
 
Iraqi Women Defy Death in Fight for Political Clout

Iraqi Women Defy Death in Fight for Political Clout
Wed Mar 23, 8:07 AM ET

By Elizabeth Piper

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Aamal, a ministry consultant, shot dead. Wijdan, a women's rights activist and election candidate, murdered. Zeena, a businesswoman, kidnapped, shot and dumped on a highway in a headscarf she never wore.

Their crime? Wearing western clothes, having jobs or speaking out to make women's voices heard in efforts to rebuild Iraq (news - web sites), plagued by relentless violence, spiraling crime and creeping religious fundamentalism.

Women in Iraq have increasingly become a target for extremists, criminals or insurgents bent on thwarting efforts to form a new government and forcing out U.S. troops.

Many have been driven into their homes, out of schools and universities and off the streets. Leading women keep a black hijab on the peg by the door to wear when venturing outside. Women who never wore the headscarf turn to it for safety.

Women politicians fear female voices have become a whisper.

"It is indeed a personal right for women whether or not they prefer to use the veil, but regarding the recent risky situation many prefer to be escorted by male relatives," said Judge Zakia Hakki, Iraq and the Middle East's first female judge.

Hakki, who is being treated in the United States after an assassination attempt in August, fears the growth of Islamic fundamentalism could erode the rights women won when Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) fell. And she is ready to fight.

"This time we will not allow the new leaders of Iraq, who think that they are freedom fighters, to ignore us ... We will take our rights. We will be there participating in drafting the new constitution."

The fight won't be easy.

HOPE

For women, the fall of Saddam boosted hopes that they could reclaim the rights set out in the country's first constitution in 1959 when they were given the right to vote.

It also contained a family code that prevented multiple marriages, marriage before the age of 18 and arbitrary divorce -- freedoms not enjoyed in other parts of the Middle East.

Under Saddam, those freedoms were eroded. Many women could take political office and walk the streets without a veil, but Hakki says they also suffered from his persecution.

"I couldn't believe that I'd see the end of the tyrant during my life. Now I am in the future that I always dreamed of," Hakki said, who tells of women being raped to shame relatives under Saddam, thousands decapitated or forced into prostitution abroad as punishment.

But the hope for Iraq's new-found democracy is tempered with fear that it might herald the start of religious fundamentalism after the Shi'ite alliance was propelled into the ascendancy.

Its victory at the Jan. 30 election prompted many secular Kurds in the North to fear strict Sharia law could become the cornerstone of the country's new constitution.

"Since the United Alliance group is the majority in the new government, I'm expecting the worse which is bringing back the 137 decree (sharia law) and trying to force women to cover up and the similar," said Basma Fakri, president of the Women's Alliance for a Democratic Iraq.



"However that is part of democracy and we (democratic women) should join forces with other members of the assembly to fight for women's rights."

Article 137, a measure allowing religious clerics to rule on family matters that opened the door to multiple marriages and the loss of property or child custody for divorced women, has become a battleground. Women managed to ensure it was not part of the transitional constitution, but fear it could return.

STRICT ISLAM

The Shi'ite alliance's choice for prime minister, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, has vowed moderate Islam and used his gynecologist wife as an example to other women not to fear a clampdown.

But with clerics in the party, some politicians fear the alliance will use female parliament members as pawns to back legislation that would dilute women's rights.

"We have now 31 percent female members in the new National Assembly, but what kind of women are they?" asked Hakki.

"Most of them have been brought on the lists of the candidates for the first time in their lives to practice as politicians, not because of their qualifications ... but only to be against women's human rights in reflecting the ideas of the Islamic extremists. They will be like toys in their hands."

Salama al-Khafaji, a member of the United Iraqi Alliance, is one female politician among several who advocates changing the family law to follow sharia.

Other politicians say the alliance needs two-thirds of votes in Iraq's new parliament to introduce such changes, and argue that the Kurds and others would never support them.

"It would be very difficult for them to do this because Iraqi people are multicultural," said Environment Minister Mishkat Moumin. "They would need a two-thirds majority to change any law regarding human rights...That will not happen."

But with women increasingly scared of leaving home or raising their voices, others fear changes could creep in. Iraq's new constitution, which should be drafted by Aug. 15, is the new test.

"Sixty percent of voters were women. They were courageous enough to choose their leaders," said Nasreen Mustapha Berwari, minister for public works.

"Women in the assembly and also of NGOs outside the assembly must advocate for women's rights and fight for them in the constitution drafting, which is going to be a very important battle, not only for Iraqi women but all Iraqi society." (Editing by Victoria Barrett)

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=602&ncid=602&e=7&u=/nm/20050323/lf_nm/iraq_women_dc
 
Official: Iraq Gov't May Be Formed Soon

By EDWARD HARRIS, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A car bomb struck a U.S. military patrol Saturday in the Iraqi capital, killing two American soldiers and injuring two others, and a Marine died in action in a restive central province, the military said. The man expected to become Iraqi's new prime minister said the coalition government could be formed within days.

"God willing, the government could witness its birth in the coming few days," said Ibrahim al-Jaafari, a top member of the Shiite Muslim alliance that won the most parliamentary seats in Iraq (news - web sites)'s Jan. 30 balloting.

The bloc has said it plans to stand al-Jaafari for the premiership.

Since holding their first session March 16, lawmakers repeatedly have postponed a second meeting because of ongoing negotiations over the makeup of the government.

Al-Jaafari empathized with citizens irritated by protracted negotiations concerning the allotment of Cabinet posts, but he said speed was being sacrificed for a solid agreement with an ethnic Kurdish bloc, expected to help form the incoming governing coalition.

"There are various groups and we're keen that the process of forming the government be quick," he said. "But we're also keen that this birth has all the requirements needed for success."

Al-Jaafari did not specify when the government could be formed.

Other top negotiators have said the assembly could convene again as early as Monday.

The interim deputy prime minister, Barham Saleh, said Friday that negotiators were intensifying efforts to bring in the country's Sunni Arabs, believed to form the core of Iraq's rebellion.

The names of the U.S. troops slain Saturday were not immediately released, and no other details were given on the car bombing.

The military also announced Saturday that a Marine was killed a day earlier in strife-torn Anbar province, a heavily Sunni Arab region west of Baghdad that contains the flashpoint cities of Fallujah and Ramadi.

No further details were given concerning the Marine, assigned to the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force.

As of Friday, at least 1,524 members of the U.S. military had died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

Also Saturday, a senior Iraqi defense ministry official said Iraqi troops backed by U.S. forces detained 121 suspected insurgents and uncovered a massive weapons cache — including car bombs, mortar rounds and machine guns — during a joint raid at Musayyib, south of Baghdad.

Neither a U.S. military spokesman nor an Iraqi Defense Ministry spokesman was able to confirm the operation at Musayyib, 40 miles south of Baghdad.

Some of the suspected guerrillas planned to attack Shiite Muslims expected to head in the coming days to an annual religious celebration in the nearby city of Karbala, the official said on condition of anonymity.

There were no injuries to any U.S. troops or Iraqi security forces, the official said, and no word on any casualties among the suspected insurgents.

Earlier, military officials said they had discovered a 600-foot tunnel leading out of the main prison facility for detainees in Iraq. No one had escaped, Army spokeswoman Maj. Flora Lee said. She did not know when guards discovered the tunnel.

Camp Bucca holds 6,049 detainees, nearly two-thirds of all those in Iraq, Lee said late Friday. The prison, situated near the southern city of Umm Qasr, it is one of three detainee facilities in Iraq.

A bucket cut from a water container and a shovel made of tent material were used to dig the tunnel, Lee said. The opening was under a floorboard of the compound and was concealed with dirt.

Authorities in charge of the compound realized a tunnel was being dug after they found dirt in latrines and other places, Lee said.

"There have been a few other attempts at digging a tunnel but nothing of this size," she said.

U.S. guards fired on prisoners during a riot at Camp Bucca on Jan. 31, killing four detainees and injuring six others.

Insurgents trying to undermine the formation of a new government, meanwhile, seemed to intensify their attacks, carrying out four suicide car bombings that killed 17 Iraqi security officials and two civilians. Militants have stepped up attacks against Iraqi police and soldiers who are key to an eventual U.S. withdrawal.

Twin suicide car bombings Friday in Iskandriyah, 30 miles south of Baghdad, targeted an Iraqi army convoy and police barracks and killed four policemen, two civilians and an Iraqi soldier, police officials said. Eight other members of the security forces and 15 civilians were injured.

Another suicide car bombing Friday targeted an Iraqi convoy south of Baghdad, leaving one Iraqi soldier dead and four others injured, police Capt. Muthama Abdul Rida said.

In Ramadi, where a Thursday bombing killed 11 Iraqi soldiers and injured 14 people, another car bomb exploded Friday. It targeted a U.S.-Iraqi convoy but only killed two attackers.

In Baghdad on Friday, gunmen killed Col. Salman Muhammad Hassan and injured two of his sons as they left a relative's funeral, security officials said. Police also said Friday they found two decapitated bodies clad in Iraqi army uniforms a day earlier on a road north of Baghdad.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm.../ap/20050326/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_050326120127
 
In an Old Mosque, The Blunt Rhetoric Of the New Iraq

Preacher Turned Politician Embodies Shiite Ambitions

By Anthony Shadid
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, March 28, 2005; Page A01

BAGHDAD -- The world according to Jalaledin Saghir, a preacher turned politician, is an uncomplicated place.

There is good and evil. There are martyrs and terrorists. The righteous (those who agree with him) are pitted against the iniquitous (those who don't). The past incarnated in Saddam Hussein is gone. In its place is a promising future in which Iraq's majority Shiite Muslims take their place as the country's deserving rulers.

"Qata'an," Saghir says often, urgent and clipped. Absolutely, it means.

Saghir, the 47-year-old scion of a clerical family, with a generous gray beard and piercing dark eyes under a white turban, is a new kind of politician in an unsure country, and his dramatic ascent illustrates the direction Iraqi politics are increasingly taking.

To his supporters, he is a symbol of Shiite empowerment, a message he delivers weekly in sermons to overflow crowds at the Baratha mosque, one of Baghdad's most revered. He is blunt and, just as important in Iraqi politics, apparently fearless. A defender of Shiite interests, he exercises his influence not only in the mosque but in Iraq's new parliament, as a representative of the United Iraqi Alliance, the Shiite coalition that captured a majority of the body's 275 seats in the Jan. 30 elections.

To his critics, he is less a symbol of empowerment and more an emblem of rhetorical excess. Even some of his clerical colleagues describe him as overly ambitious and unrelentingly provocative. Some see demagoguery in his bluntness; and in his bravery they see incitement that is further fraying the already tattered relations between Iraq's Shiites and a disempowered Sunni Arab minority.

He is perhaps best described as a product of the tumult that has colored Iraq since the fall of Hussein in April 2003 and of the dramatic changes that have accompanied it. His success or failure in the months ahead could help delineate the still-ambiguous role of the Shiite clergy in the nation's political affairs.

In the quest for legitimacy in Iraqi politics, Saghir has much to draw on: his alliance with Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, Iraq's preeminent religious leader; the authority of his family's name; the resonant language of religion that can intertwine seamlessly with the agenda of a politician; and a grass-roots network provided by his mosque and the hundreds of loyal followers who propelled him into power.

"My concern is solely to be in the service of the people," Saghir said in an interview. His people, he meant.
A Mosque Transformed

The Baratha mosque that serves as Saghir's headquarters is perched behind rows of barbed wire, concrete barricades and white and yellow steel barriers. Its walls are draped in the iconography of religious activism: banners celebrating martyred Shiite saints, portraits of Sistani, slogans on black banners that serve as a Shiite version of agitprop.

In a land full of sacred shrines, Baratha is among the most venerated. By tradition, Imam Ali, a cousin and son-in-law of the prophet Muhammad, visited the site in the 7th century, digging a well that still delivers water today. Pilgrims from as far away as Afghanistan visit the fount, filling bottles with water believed to have curative powers.

With the consent of powerful allies, Saghir treats the mosque as his family's fiefdom.

For years, it was led by his father, Sheik Ali Saghir, a beloved cleric and lieutenant of one of the country's most prominent ayatollahs, Sayyid Muhsin Hakim. Saghir's father died in 1975, and the young activist cleric fled into exile in 1979, spending time in Syria, Iran and Lebanon. He returned to Baghdad -- and Baratha -- the week after Hussein was driven from power.

"We left when Baghdad was very beautiful," he said. "When we returned, it was destroyed."

Since his arrival, he has transformed the mosque into a nexus of an efficient political movement that works in the name of Sistani and under the loose umbrella of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, one of the main Shiite political parties.

In a small shop near the worship hall, compact discs of Saghir's sermons line shelves along two walls. Each costs about 50 cents, and as many as 400 are sold each week. On any Friday, worshipers crowd the counter with money in one hand, the shoes they take off before prayer in the other. Minutes after his sermon ends, the CDs are available for sale.

Wooden scaffolding climbs up the mosque's wall, and workers lay brick for new additions that will cost $600,000. They will house, in part, committees organized over the past year for charity, women's issues, culture, information and education.

"There are those who are lazy, and there are those who like to work all the time, with both their mind and body," said Majid Saadi, dressed in a brown suit with no tie, his gray beard neatly trimmed.

Saadi is Saghir's point man in the information campaign at which his followers have become so adept. On religious occasions, the literature they produce celebrates Shiite ritual that was discouraged for decades; during this year's elections, it was avowedly political.

"We worked day and night," said Saadi. "The people were thirsty for information."

In the month before the vote, the mosque printed more than 1 million posters supporting the Shiite coalition, Saadi said. For a time, they seemed to grace every wall in Baghdad. More than 1,500 volunteers loyal to Saghir also helped produce 20,000 hand-written banners, he said. Twenty seminars were organized at the mosque during the campaign, recorded on CDs and distributed by the thousands. As many as 100,000 leaflets were printed.

"The biggest efforts to support [the Shiite coalition] came from the Baratha mosque," Saghir said.
'The Anger of the Gentle'

When Saghir returned to Baghdad in 2003, he preached to 2,000 people. Now he estimates there are three times that many. His ambition: 30,000 worshipers drawn to the mosque for Friday prayers and a sermon as political as it is religious.

In today's Iraq, Saghir is what passes for a showman.

At a podium draped in black and adorned in arabesque and calligraphy, Saghir starts slowly, as though weary. His low voice is almost a whisper. The blink of his half-closed eyes is exaggerated. Then he runs his hand slowly through his beard as he scans the crowd.

On this day, the topic was the members of Iraq's new parliament -- Saghir among them -- convening for the first time since the election. "When I entered the room," he said, "the word of God was on my tongue, my heart quivered, and my eyes were tearing."

At the words, the crowd erupted: "Victory for Islam! Death to Saddam!"

He went on, invoking the names of prominent Iraqi clerics killed under Hussein's rule: "I saw the blood of the two Sadrs and the Hakim family, the blood of Iraq, north and south, from its center, east and west. My heart quaked."

Saghir's sermon is like a banner in the wind. At times, it is limp before it begins to flap on a light breeze. It sags, then is blown by a gust. Many gifted preachers steadily build to a crescendo, but few seem as skillful as Saghir in gliding from one extreme to the other.

Saghir said he never rehearses his speech, never thinks ahead about what he will say. "I watch the people as I give my sermon," he said. "I can tell if I'm having an effect or not."

In contrast to the public statements of the Supreme Council, with their emphasis on reconciliation with and inclusion of disenchanted Sunnis, Saghir is brusque with his followers. He speaks as if delivering self-evident truths, in impeccable, eloquent Arabic.

Insurgents? They are dismissed as Hussein loyalists disguised as holy warriors -- "Baathists wearing beards and turbans," he calls them in one sermon.

He calls their leaders the "heroes of satellite television," mocking their penchant for issuing statements on video. He ridicules the doctrine of the Association of Muslim Scholars, the most influential Sunni Muslim group, as "Saddam Hussein's Islam." And purges lie ahead, he warns, for Iraq's outgoing interim government, which he calls tainted by "the dirty faces of the Baathists.".

"The killers of today," he says in another sermon, "are the same killers as yesterday."

National reconciliation? "With whom?" he has asked in more than one talk. "With those criminals who have shed the blood of our people in Hilla, Karbala, Najaf and every other place in Iraq?"

Time and again, he insists that patience is running out.

"We warn you about the anger of the gentle and the patient," he said. "When the anger begins, nothing can stop it."
A Race Against Time

A man with a rifle sits outside Saghir's office. It is an understandable precaution.

Since he returned to Iraq in April 2003, Saghir, a father of five, estimates he has faced 21 attempts to kill him or his followers -- mortars fired a half-dozen times at the mosque, five would-be suicide bombers prevented from getting inside, a fusillade of gunfire at a car he was thought to be riding in (he wasn't), and assorted other car bombings and attempted shootings.

Khalid Fatlawi, a bookseller at the mosque, said: "He doesn't care about death. He has no fear."

"Why should I be scared?" Saghir asked as he sat in his office, which has newly painted walls, six shelves of books and two telephones.

Imbued like many Shiites with a reverence for sacrifice and struggle, he and his followers view the attacks as giving them a certain street credibility. To instill confidence in his followers, he said, he must speak with confidence.

"I feel like I am in a race against time with the terrorists," he said, "and I think we're winning the battle."

"Absolutely," he added.

But some question his modesty -- including other Shiite clerics, who, like him, are expected to disavow ambition. They see him as an opportunistic politician, capitalizing on his ties with the main Shiite party, his platform at the Baratha mosque and his perceived relationship with Sistani, whose influence is unparalleled among devout Shiites in Iraq.

Some of Saghir's detractors view him as a product of the Iraqi opposition that spent much of Hussein's era in exile. In those years, groups such as the Supreme Council were organized along explicitly sectarian or religious lines.

"He's very ambitious," said Salah Ubaidi, a cleric who remained in Iraq during Hussein's rule. "This sometimes puts him in embarrassing positions. He does not have enough flexibility to fulfill these ambitions."

Many Sunni politicians recoil at Saghir's language -- to them, evidence that they can expect second-class status in a Shiite-dominated state.

"He's one of the guys pushing the situation toward the extreme," said Saleh Mutlak, who leads a small, largely Sunni Arab party. "He's very biased, very aggressive, and the way he speaks is only going to deteriorate things between Iraqis."

Saghir shakes his head at the thought. He casts his eyes down and speaks slowly, almost wearily.

"If they want to reconcile, they should send me a message of peace," he said. "They should not send me a car bomb."

His tone softens, becoming almost reassuring.

"As long as Shiites maintain their discipline, there will be no civil war," he says. "We have a great storehouse of patience."

But, in words that were part prediction, part threat, he added, "What is right in the end will triumph."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A5513-2005Mar27.html
 
Iraq Lawmakers Fail to Agree on Speaker

By MARIAM FAM, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iraqi lawmakers ended a chaotic session Tuesday without agreeing on who would serve as their speaker, exposing deep divides among the National Assembly's diverse members.

The short session — mostly held behind closed doors after a nearly three-hour delay — adjourned until this weekend.

Hussein al-Sadr, a Shiite cleric and member of interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's coalition, said the parliament speaker likely would be chosen Sunday, giving Sunni Arab lawmakers time to come up with a candidate.

"We saw that things were confused today, so we gave them a last chance," al-Sadr said. "We expect the Sunni Arab brothers to nominate their candidate. Otherwise, we will vote on a candidate on Sunday."

Nearly two months after Iraq's historic Jan. 30 elections, negotiations to form a new government have stalled over Cabinet posts and how to include the fragile nation's Sunni minority — dominant under former dictator Saddam Hussein and believed to make up the core of the ongoing insurgency.

The bickering exposed tensions in the newly formed parliament, with Allawi storming out of the session, followed by interim President Ghazi al-Yawer, a Sunni Arab who turned down the speaker's job.

"What are we going to tell the citizens who sacrificed their lives and cast ballots on Jan. 30?" al-Sadr said earlier.

Shiite, Kurdish and Sunni representatives were trying to come up with a Sunni Arab candidate that legislators promised would be announced during Tuesday's session.

Once it began, however, lawmakers immediately began arguing over whether to delay their decision, and the leader of the session decided to kick reporters and cameras out and close the meeting to the public.

"We demand to know the details of what's happening behind the scenes!" one woman shouted before the live television feed of the gathering went blank.

Sunni Arab lawmaker Meshaan al-Jubouri called for a decision, saying: "There are voices calling for electing the speaker today. This cannot be."

"This is ridiculous," he said as he left the meeting hall.

Negotiators were lobbying al-Yawer to take the speaker's job.

"We have apologized for practical reasons," said al-Yawer, who is seeking one of the country's two vice presidential spots. "With the small number of Sunni Arabs in the assembly, this post won't put us in a position to strike a balance."

Critics of the process say the Sunni Arab candidates being discussed for government posts have no influence on the insurgency, and their participation is unlikely to affect it.

Some explosions were heard in Baghdad on Tuesday, where officials had warned residents to prepare for stepped up insurgent attacks. It was unclear if they caused any damage. During the first National Assembly meeting, on March 16, militants lobbed mortar rounds at the heavily fortified Green Zone in the city's center, where lawmakers held their meeting.

Violence also continued in the rest of the country, with a car bombing in the northern city of Kirkuk that killed one person and injured more than a dozen others, police said.

Three Romanian journalists were kidnapped, the television station employing two of them said Tuesday. The Romanian Embassy in Baghdad confirmed the three were missing but refused to give more information. Romania has about 800 troops in Iraq.

The Shiite-led United Iraqi Alliance and the Kurdish coalition, which finished first and second in the landmark elections, have reached out to the Sunnis and to members of Allawi's coalition, hoping to form an inclusive national unity government.

But haggling over the level of participation of the Sunnis, as well as jockeying for Cabinet posts and efforts to resolve differences between the various groups, have left Iraq without a government almost two months after the 275-member National Assembly was elected. Lawmakers have until mid-August to draft a permanent constitution.

The assembly will name a president and two deputies, who in turn will nominate a prime minister. The presidency is expected to go to Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani and the prime minister's post to Shiite politician Ibrahim al-Jaafari — but the exact timeline is unclear.

Some Iraqis have expressed frustration with the drawn-out talks, which critics argued reflected the nature of sectarian politics in the new Iraq. Many Sunnis boycotted the election or stayed away out of fear of attacks. But some have had a change of heart after the vote was touted as a success.

Naseer al-Ani of the Iraqi Islamic Party, a main Sunni group, said the limited options facing the Sunnis — who only have a few members in the assembly — contributed to the delay.

Al-Ani's party dealt a blow to the election process when it withdrew from the race, but it is now participating in talks and wants to help draft the constitution.

Issues such as how many and which ministries should go to the Sunni Arabs, as well as the names of candidates for these posts and for vice presidents, remained unresolved. Some Sunni legislators want the same number of Cabinet posts as the Kurds.

Together, the alliance and the Kurds have 215 seats in parliament — enough to make key decisions. But their members say it would be shortsighted to go it alone, adding they are against marginalizing any of the country's groups.

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050329/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq
 
2nd Iraqi Assembly Meeting Breaks Down Amid Accusations

By EDWARD WONG

BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 29 - The second meeting of the new Iraqi constitutional assembly descended into a series of contentious exchanges today, as some members accused others of hijacking the political process and betraying the Iraqi people by failing to form a government.

Prominent politicians also said in interviews that the delay in forming a government could force the assembly to take an extra half-year to write the permanent constitution, pushing the deadline for a first draft well beyond the original target date of Aug. 15. That means the delay could significantly throw off the timetable for the establishment of a full-term democratically elected government.

The anger boiled over into a shouting match today and showed the fiery tensions that are rising as the main political parties fail to reach an agreement to form a coalition government, more than two months after Iraqi voters defied insurgent threats to vote in the first free elections here in a half-century.

"People on the street are counting on us," said Hussein al-Sadr, a moderate Shiite cleric who is a member of the Iraqi List, the slate formed by Ayad Allawi, the interim prime minister. "What are we going to tell the people who went to vote on Jan. 30?"

Mr. Sadr made his remarks as the third speaker of the afternoon, gripping a microphone as he stood in flowing black robes. He appeared to be directing his venom at the main Shiite and Kurdish leaders, who have been in heated, private negotiations to work out a way to share power in the new government. Officials from both sides said in interviews before the meeting that it would be at least a few more days before the assembly takes the first step toward forming a government.

Officials, though, have been saying for weeks that the creation of the government would take only "a few days."

The part of the meeting today that was open to reporters lasted only 20 minutes. After Mr. Sadr vented his frustrations over the protracted talks, the second member to do so, the temporary head of the assembly, Sheik Dhari al-Fayadh, suggested that the television feed from the room be switched off. Some members protested, saying the public should be allowed to see the proceedings, but the feed was discontinued nonetheless.

Before the meeting began, leading politicians said in interviews that all the sides were close to agreeing on a new government, but were haggling over posts. One of the most contentious jobs is that of oil minister. The Shiites and Kurds are each vying for the position, said Saad Jawad Qindeel, an assembly member and a representative of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a prominent Shiite party.

"The negotiation regarding this is held up, is frozen," he said.

The politicians also said they were trying to negotiate with Sunni Arab leaders to see what government posts the Sunnis might be willing to take. The former governing Sunni Arabs largely boycotted the elections, and some of them are now struggling to organize themselves to take part in the new government. Haichem al-Hassani, a prominent Sunni politician and the minister of industry, said the Shiites and Kurds were trying to "impose on the Sunnis who they should appoint for different positions."

Mr. Haichem said he is vying for the post of minister of defense, responsible for overseeing the Iraqi Army.

The different groups said that they could not appoint a speaker of the assembly today because Sheik Ghazi al-Yawer, the interim president of Iraq, had turned down that job. An alternative candidate may be Fawaz al-Jabar, a Sunni Arab who joined the main Shiite bloc to take part in the elections. Dr. Hussein Shahristani, a nuclear physicist and close associate to Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the most powerful Shiite cleric in Iraq, is favored for a vice-speaker position, said Mowaffak al-Rubaie, the national security adviser.

Mr. Sadr, the moderate cleric, demanded that the assembly reconvene on Wednesday to name a speaker. The assembly's leaders ignored him.

The 275-member National Assembly is working on a tight timetable. It is supposed to have a draft of the constitution ready by August, though a measure in the transitional law approved a year ago allows the president and two vice-presidents to ask for a six-month extension. If the assembly adheres to the original schedule, then full-term elections would be held at the end of the year.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/29/i...&en=b99b750213e34e83&ei=5094&partner=homepage
 
Iraqi Wrangling May Delay New Constitution and Next Vote

By EDWARD WONG

BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 29 - Iraqi political leaders said today that the delay in forming a new government would probably force them to postpone by half a year the writing of a permanent constitution and the next set of elections. Their comments came as sharp ethnic and sectarian divisions erupted during an assembly meeting, with some members angrily accusing others of betraying the Iraqi people by failing to install a coalition government.

The heated arguments prompted the head of the assembly to ban reporters from the room and call for the assembly to reconvene next weekend, nine weeks after the Jan. 30 elections, in hope that the top members would be ready to fill some key government positions then.

Prominent assembly members said it appeared the deadline for a first draft of the constitution would have to pushed back six months beyond the original deadline of Aug. 15. The delay is allowed under the transitional law if it is proposed by the Iraqi president and if the assembly approves it by a majority vote by Aug. 1. Elections for a full-term government at the end of the year would then also have to be pushed back by half a year, slowing the ambitious American goal of planting democracy here in the heart of the Middle East.

"Realistically, I think it's very difficult," Haichem al-Hassani, a leading Sunni Arab politician and a top candidate for the post of defense minister, said of meeting the Aug. 15 deadline. "I think it's wishful thinking."

Ali al-Dabagh, a prominent member of the main Shiite bloc and an appointee of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the most powerful Shiite cleric in Iraq, said that "time is too short."

The afternoon meeting of the assembly, which spiraled down into a shouting match, revealed how the bitter negotiations to form a government were poisoning the entire political process and fracturing the major political blocs, already divided along ethnic and sectarian lines.

In Washington, President Bush tried to address growing concerns that a viable democratic future for Iraq was in jeopardy.

"We expect a new government will be chosen soon and that the assembly will vote to confirm it," he told reporters in the White House Rose Garden. "We look forward to working with the government that emerges from this process."

In recent days, politicians here said the assembly might be able to choose an assembly speaker and two vice speakers at today's meeting. But those hopes were dashed on Monday when the leading candidate for speaker, Sheik Ghazi al-Yawer, the interim president, turned down the job. The main parties have agreed that a Sunni Arab should take the post and are now struggling over whom to nominate.

Shatha al-Mousawi, a member of the main Shiite bloc, the United Iraq Alliance, stood up at the meeting in her flowing black robes and furiously asked the temporary assembly leaders why no one could settle on a candidate, essentially accusing the Sunni Arabs of being responsible for the delay.

"I demand the revelation of all details to the public and to all the members in order for the people to be aware of who is obstructing the democratic and political process," she said. "If you don't do that, then you are covering for the enemies of the Iraqi people."

An elderly Shiite cleric, Hussein al-Sadr, took up the microphone a few minutes later and called for the assembly to start installing a government on Wednesday.

"The Iraqis in the street are waiting for an accomplishment, waiting for work to be done, and what answer do we have for them?" said Mr. Sadr, a member of the Iraqi List, the slate formed by Ayad Allawi, the interim prime minister. "What is the answer we have for the citizens who risked their lives and voted on Jan 30th?"

As the shouting rose in volume and as more accusations flew, four prominent members of the assembly left the room - Dr. Allawi; his friend Hazem al-Shalaan, the defense minister; Sheik Yawer; and the public works minister, Nasreen Berwari, who is married to Sheik Yawer.

The 275-member assembly is charged with installing a government and writing a permanent constitution. Once the assembly puts in place a president and two vice presidents, called the presidency council, those officers will have two weeks to appoint a prime minister, who chooses a cabinet. The problem is that the transitional law approved in March 2004 and co-written with the Americans does not set a deadline for the appointment of the presidency council.

The main Shiite bloc, which has 140 assembly seats, and the main Kurdish bloc, which has 75, have been in tough negotiations to form a coalition, since a two-thirds vote of the assembly is needed to approve the government. The two sides have been at odds over a range of issues, like control of the oil-rich city of Kirkuk and the role of Islam in the new government. In the last week, officials from the two groups have said conflicts over several important ministerial posts, including that of oil minister, and talks with Dr. Allawi and Sunni Arab leaders were slowing the process.

The assembly meeting unfolded as reports emerged that three Romanian journalists were kidnapped in Baghdad on Monday. Two of them, Marie Jeanne Ion and Sorin Miscoci, work for a television network, Prime TV, and the third, Ovidiu Ohanesian, writes for a newspaper, Romania Libera. Romania has 800 troops in Iraq, though Romanian officials said the abductions were probably motivated by hope of ransom rather than politics.

In Kirkuk, a bomb explosion on a road injured 16 people, police officials said. The attack took place as the 41-member provincial council met to try to appoint a provincial government. But the 15 Arab and Turkmen members stormed out, accusing the rest of the council, made up of Kurds, of trying to take over the city, according to a reporter for Agence France-Presse who was in the room.

In Baghdad, at about 1:15 p.m., shortly before the National Assembly meeting began, two mortar shells landed in the heavily fortified Green Zone, where the session was being held. There were no reports of injuries. Apache attack helicopters swooped over the Green Zone the entire day, and American troops and Iraqi police shut down most of the main bridges spanning the Tigris River.

Across the city, people griped about the urgent need for the bickering politicians to pull together.

"The only loser in all this is the Iraqi people," said Maithem Ali, 30, an employee in a cellphone store in the Karada neighborhood downtown. "The situation is getting worse, and they are still just holding discussions out there."

The assembly meeting opened at 1:35 p.m., after the members ate lunch together and after party leaders met in side rooms in the convention center to try to work out a deal to name an assembly speaker. When that failed, members the assembly were told that they would have to put off filling the post, which ignited Ms. Mousawi's tirade against the Sunni Arabs and Mr. Sadr's angry remarks. After 20 minutes of this, the live television feed was ordered shut off and two pool reporters told to leave the room, setting off a spate of protests from a half-dozen assembly members.

"Why are you asking the media to go outside?" one man yelled. "We want the Iraqi people to see this."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/29/i...&en=b99b750213e34e83&ei=5094&partner=homepage
 
Clerics Urge Iraqis to Join Security Force

Clerics Urge Iraqis to Join Security Force
33 minutes ago

By SINAN SALAHEDDIN, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Influential Sunni Muslim clerics who once condemned Iraqi security force members as traitors made a surprise turnaround Friday and encouraged citizens to join the nascent police and army.

If heeded, the announcement could strengthen the image of the officers and soldiers trying to take over the fight against the Sunni-led insurgency.

Still, it wasn't a full-fledged endorsement. The edict, endorsed by a group of 64 Sunni clerics and scholars, instructed enlistees to refrain from helping foreign troops against their own countrymen.

Ahmed Abdul Ghafour al-Samarrai, a cleric in the Association of Muslim Scholars, read the edict during a sermon at a major Sunni mosque in Baghdad. He said it was necessary for Sunnis to join the security forces to prevent Iraqi police and army from falling into "the hands of those who have caused chaos, destruction and violated the sanctities."

It seemed to be a recognition by the Sunni minority, which dominated under former dictator Saddam Hussein, that Iraq's interim government is slowly retaking control of the nation and paving the way for a U.S. withdrawal.

In the central city of Samarra, an explosion Friday blew away part of a wall on top of a minaret from a 9th-century mosque, scattering rubble on the stairs that spiral up the outside of one of Iraq's most recognized landmarks.

Witnesses said two men climbed the 170-foot-tall minaret, then returned to the ground before the blast. The U.S. military blamed insurgents.

It was unclear why the minaret was targeted. U.S. troops have used it as a sniper position, and last year the terrorist group al-Qaida in Iraq, led by Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, flew a flag from its peak. Sgt. Brian Thomas, a spokesman for the 42nd Infantry Division, said coalition forces no longer use the minaret.

A symbol of Samarra's past glory, the minaret is all that remains of a mosque built during the Abbasid Islamic dynasty. It is featured on Iraq's 250-dinar bill.

Outside Samarra, Iraqi and U.S. soldiers exchanged gunfire with insurgents during a raid. Iraqi Maj. Gen. Rashid Feleih said five insurgents were killed.

In the holy city of Karbala, Shiite Muslims packed bus stations to head home after a Shiite religious holiday whose participants had been targeted by insurgents. Many pilgrims slept on city streets after Thursday's festival because they feared nighttime attacks on the roads home.

Special security measures remained in place in Karbala, with policemen keeping watch from rooftops and patrolling the streets.

A bomb exploded near a Sunni mosque in the northern city of Kirkuk and killed an Iraqi heading to Friday prayers, police official Sarhad Qader said. Three people were wounded.

An explosion was heard near Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone as people hurried home before the nightly curfew. U.S. officials had no immediate information.

In Balad Ruz, 30 miles northeast of the capital, gunmen killed the police chief, Col. Hatim Rashid, and another officer at a police station, police Col. Mudhafar al-Jubouri said. A third officer was injured.

Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who led uprisings against the U.S.-led coalition last year, called on his supporters to stage a protest in Baghdad on April 9 to mark the second anniversary of U.S. troops entering the capital.

Sheik Hassan al-Edhari, an official at al-Sadr's Baghdad office, said the protesters will demand that the new Iraqi government set a timetable for withdrawing foreign troops and for trying Saddam.



Negotiations continued over who will lead the newly elected National Assembly, as Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani and Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Shiite-led United Iraqi Alliance, talked about speeding up the formation of Iraq's new government.

The two discussed the possibility of formally naming Talabani as Iraq's president Sunday during a parliamentary session, said al-Hakim's son and political adviser, Mohsen Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim.

"We're running out of time," he said. "The delay is not in our interest."

Ahmad Chalabi, head of an Iraqi exile group that provided intelligence to the United States on Saddam's weapons programs, praised a U.S. presidential commission's report Thursday that he said cleared his Iraq National Congress.

"We welcome this report as a vindication," Chalabi said in a statement released Friday. "We have consistently stated that the INC played a very small role in U.S. intelligence reporting on Saddam's" weapons of mass destruction.

While the report did say the INC-related sources had a "minimal impact on prewar assessments," it also accused two INC sources of lying to the U.S. government about the use of mobile biological weapons factories to evade inspectors.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=4&u=/ap/20050401/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq
 
Iraqi Politicians Complain of Flaws in Interim Law

By EDWARD WONG

BAGHDAD, Iraq, April 2 — After weeks of factional haggling that have prompted warnings of increasing civil distress, several leading Iraqi politicians have begun saying that flawed measures in the interim constitution are partly to blame for the failure to form a new government.

The document, which Iraqi officials co-wrote with the Americans, was approved in March 2004 and is the most enduring political legacy of the formal American occupation. It is called the transitional administrative law, or as the TAL, and sets the timetable for elections and the rules for installing a government, and it tries to address difficult issues, like the question of property restoration for Kurds exiled from the oil-rich city of Kirkuk.

Senior politicians, particularly Shiite Arabs, are now attacking the TAL for enshrining a process that they see as contributing to the deadlock. They are especially critical of the measure that requires a two-thirds vote by the national assembly to appoint a president, and they point out that the law fails to set a deadline for the appointment.

“This is really sort of a weakness in the TAL,” said Adnan Ali, a deputy head of the Dawa Islamic Party, the Shiite party whose leader, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, is the top candidate for prime minister. “It’s an obstruction rather than an assurance. This should have been done differently.”

Mr. Ali and other politicians acknowledge that hardheaded self-interest among the various factions has caused the delays, but they say the transitional law could have set a lower bar for consensus and specified more deadlines.

In most countries with parliamentary systems, the party that wins a simple majority of the seats has the right to install an executive government, legal experts say. Here, the main Shiite bloc, the United Iraqi Alliance, won 140 of 275 assembly seats in the Jan. 30 elections, but must ally with one or more partners to form a coalition government because of the two-thirds rule.

The most obvious partner is the Kurdistan Alliance, which won 75 seats. But, nine weeks after the elections, the two sides have yet to finalize any deal.

Officials from the two groups also say the process has slowed because they are trying to bring in the parties of Ayad Allawi, the interim prime minister, and the Sunni Arabs, who largely boycotted the elections.

Iraqis have grown disillusioned and restless, and the day-to-day workings of ministries have slowed because of the uncertainty. American commanders have warned of a possible rise in violence.

A car bomb exploded Saturday at a police station in the town of Khan Bani Saad, 10 miles north of Baghdad, killing four policemen and one civilian and wounding three policemen and a civilian, the Interior Ministry said.

Also on Saturday, the American military said a marine was killed the previous day by small-arms fire Ramadi.

But some American diplomats here and some Iraqi officials who helped write the transitional law say the process is unfolding as it should. They emphasize that the two-thirds requirement was meant to prevent any single group from dominating the new government. They also say they did not set a deadline on appointing the president to avoid “micromanaging” the process.

“The thinking simply was to have a balancing of powers and interests in the transitional period,” said Feisal al-Istrabadi, a senior fellow at the DePaul University College of Law and a main drafter of the transitional law. “It seemed to me that it was appropriate that a supermajority be required so no one party will dominate. I still believe that was the right decision.”

The transitional law requires that the assembly appoint, by a two-thirds vote, a president and two vice presidents, called the presidency council. Those officers then have two weeks to appoint a prime minister, who would in turn select a cabinet. The assembly would approve those positions by a majority vote. If the presidency council fails to choose a prime minister within the two weeks, the assembly can appoint one by a two-thirds vote.

Mr. Istrabadi said that he personally pushed for the two-thirds requirement, but that he did not expect such high bars in the permanent constitution the new assembly must write.

The requirement was put in “exactly because this is a transitional process,” said Mr. Istrabadi, now Iraq’s deputy permanent representative to the United Nations in New York. He said he did not think that the negotiations had “taken an inordinate amount of time.”

A senior American diplomat said that the “genius of the TAL is it compels disparate Iraqi political interests to compromise.”

“If it acted by a simple majority,” he said, “it would actually promote a civil war rather than compromise.”

The same diplomat, though, acknowledged that he was surprised there was no government yet. He said it appeared that the politicians representing the three major groups in Iraqi society — Shiite Arabs, Sunni Arabs and Kurds — were not reaching out to each other enough. On Tuesday, at the second meeting of the national assembly, there was “still not as much commingling between the groups as you would see in a Western parliament,” he said.

The two-thirds measure has irked officials in the main Shiite bloc. Shiite Arabs, the majority of the population, were long oppressed under Baathist rule and are eager to assume power.

Saad Jawad Qindeel, an assembly member and a representative of a major Shiite party, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, said: “Legally speaking, we in the United Iraqi Alliance don’t need any coalitions. We have enough votes, more than 50 percent of the assembly seats.”

Several other measures in the law could be slowing down the political process, Iraqi officials say. The law sets a deadline of Aug. 15 for the national assembly to agree on a first draft of the permanent constitution, but also gives the assembly the option of pushing back the deadline — and the elections for a full-term government — by up to half a year.

“There is great enthusiasm from everyone to draft the constitution,” said Jalaladeen al-Saghir, a conservative Shiite cleric who sits on the assembly and is a deputy of the Supreme Council. “But it’s possible to extend the deadline for six months, and this is fine.”

The transitional law also used purposefully vague language regarding the timing of restoration of property stripped from Kurds by Saddam Hussein’s government in Kirkuk: Article 58 merely says it should be done “expeditiously.” This issue in particular has been a big stumbling block in the negotiations, as the Kurds pressure the Shiites to speed up restoration.

The committee that drafted the transitional law included members of the political parties on the American-appointed Iraqi Governing Council. Adnan Pachachi, the former foreign minister and exile, served as chairman. Officials from the Coalition Provisional Authority, the governing American body, worked with the committee.

Mr. Istrabadi said the best evidence so far of the transitional law’s success was the fact that the first set of elections took place as scheduled and, at least for a period, inspired confidence in the Iraqi people.

Still, the law will face many more tests. At the assembly meeting on Tuesday, the temporary head of the assembly kicked reporters out of the room and forced state-run television to cut to a popular folk singer belting out the national anthem, “My Homeland, My Homeland,” even though the transitional law says that “meetings of the national assembly shall be public.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/03/international/03baghdad-web.html?
 
anyone else here loves the fact that the group that wants to run rampant over all others are complaining that they can't because the law won't let them. somebody must have told them this shit would be a piece of cake.

of course its funny as long as the shites stay within the law.
 
Iraqi Assembly Makes Progress, Elects Speaker

Iraqi Assembly Makes Progress, Elects Speaker
1 hour, 1 minute ago

By Mariam Karouny

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi politicians elected a Sunni Arab to be the speaker of parliament Sunday, ending a political impasse and taking a decisive step toward forming a government nine weeks after historic elections.


In a ballot, the members of the 275-seat National Assembly voted overwhelmingly to elect Hajem al-Hassani, the current industry minister, as speaker. Hassani, a religious Sunni, is an ally of Interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi.

"We passed the first hurdle," Hassani told reporters afterwards. "The Iraqi people have proven that they can overcome the political crisis that has plagued the country for the last two months."

But he also warned against complacency.

"If we neglect our responsibilities and fail, we will hurt ourselves and the people will replace us with others," he said.

Shi'ite politician Hussain Shahristani and Kurdish lawmaker Arif Tayfor were elected deputy speakers. The Shi'ites and Kurds, who came first and second in the Jan. 30 election, had agreed between them that a member of the once-dominant Sunni Arab minority should be speaker.

The vote took place hours after insurgents mounted a brazen attack on Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad, battling U.S. forces for an hour in an assault that underscored Iraq's profound security risks. Forty-four U.S. troops were wounded.

While the meeting was going on, a mortar round struck near Baghdad's fortified Green Zone, where the assembly gathered, causing a loud blast but little damage, officials said.

ARGUMENT OVER POSTS

The process of forming a government has been drawn out by sharp differences between the Islamist-led Shi'ite alliance and the more secular Kurds over who should get which cabinet posts.

Parliament's last meeting on March 29 descended into chaos after politicians berated their leaders for lack of action.

The naming of a speaker is one step toward ending Iraq's political deadlock, but a more important step will be the naming of a president, two vice-presidents, and prime minister.

Those appointments are expected at parliament's next meeting Wednesday, Shahristani told reporters.

The president is expected to be Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, and one of the vice presidents will be Adel Abdul Mahdi, a Shi'ite. The Sunnis need more time to decide who their candidate for the other vice-president position will be.

The Shi'ite Ibrahim Jaafari will be prime minister.

Iraqi officials have raised concerns that the longer it takes to form a government, the more it will fuel the insurgency by making elected authorities appear weak and indecisive.

There is also anger among ordinary Iraqis, more than 8 million of whom braved the threat of violence to vote in January only to see politics descend into squabbling.



Most of the top cabinet posts have already been worked out but the process has involved intense bargaining and brinkmanship. One position still in dispute is the oil ministry, which both the Shi'ites and the Kurds are determined to secure.

CONSTITUTION

The standoff threatens to derail the timetable for drawing up a new constitution, which is due to be drafted by mid-August.

It is also incurring the wrath of Sunni Arabs, who are demanding a role in the government despite their poor showing at the polls -- only 17 of the 275 parliamentarians are Sunni Arabs, the result of most Sunnis boycotting the vote.

Shi'ite and Kurdish leaders fear that if the Sunnis are not brought into the process, it will exacerbate the Sunni-led insurgency that has been raging for more than two years.

There had been indications in recent days that the violence may be easing, with the number of daily attacks down by around 20 percent since the election.

But Saturday's assault on Abu Ghraib prison by between 40 and 60 insurgents using suicide car bombs, rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and small arms fire was a reminder of the scale of attacks militants can still launch.

As well as the 44 U.S. troops wounded, 12 detainees were hurt, one of them seriously. U.S. troops said one insurgent was confirmed killed.

It was believed to be the largest and most determined attack on Abu Ghraib, a prison where more than 3,000 suspected insurgents are held in U.S. detention and which was at the center of a prisoner abuse scandal last year.

In other violence a U.S. Marine was killed in a blast during combat operations in the western town of Haditha Saturday, the military said.

The death raises to at least 1,163 the number of U.S. troops killed in action in Iraq since the war began. (Additional reporting by Omar Anwar, Waleed Ibrahim, Khaled Yacoub Oweis and Andrew Marshall in Baghdad)

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=578&ncid=578&e=4&u=/nm/20050403/ts_nm/iraq_dc
 
Re: Iraqi Assembly Makes Progress, Elects Speaker

<font size="6"><center>Iraqi govt pitted against US army </font size></center>

April 8, 2005
DAWN (Pakistan's most widely circulated
English language newspaper.)
By Aaron Glantz

<font size="3">WASHINGTON: One of the first orders of business for the new Iraqi government under Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani and Shia Islamist Ibrahim Jaafari will be to strike a deal with the United States military over the terms and conditions of the 150,000-troop-strong US military presence.

A United Nations Security Council resolution authorizing the occupation ends in December. After that, the occupation will be technically illegal. Chris Toensing of the Washington-based Middle East Research and Information Project says the Shia United Iraqi Alliance, which won the most votes in January's election, has already abandoned its election promise to demand a timeline for US withdrawal.

"Right now, the United States is the protector of the United Iraqi Alliance," Toensing said, noting the US military had promised to protect whatever government was elected.

Today on Capitol Hill, the Senate Appropriations Committee considered adding 80 billion dollars more for US operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, bringing the total emergency monies for the two wars to 210 billion dollars.

"That's the structure," Toensing said. "Now the big danger is that relationship will become entrenched even though the Iraqi side will not be really happy with it, but they will perceive that they will have no other choice if they want to stay in power."

Toensing expects the US military to become tightly linked to both the armed wings of Shia religious parties and Kurdish peshmerga under the new government, since both support large-scale crackdowns on the largely Sunni insurgency, taking more prisoners and secretly locking them up in prisons like Abu Ghraib with minimal oversight.

"I couldn't get close to the prison when I was there two weeks ago," Democratic Senator Dick Durban of Illinois told IPS. "Members of Congress who go there are not allowed to leave the Green Zone so I couldn't get close to it."

International human rights groups have also been barred from visiting US-run prisons in Iraq. Amnesty International's Washington lobbyist Jumana Musa says it is unclear what this latest government will mean for the more than 10,000 Iraqis in US custody. Most of them have never seen a lawyer and never been charged with a crime.

"There is the creation of something that is supposed to represent the rule of law," she said, but added that it is unclear how much authority the new Iraqi government will have over detainees.

"What does this mean?" she asked. "Do they face justice in the Iraqi system? Are they in US military custody, in which case they would face justice through a military tribunal? Are they going to face justice? Are they going to be held indefinitely? We don't know the answers to any of these questions."

Beyond that are the substantive differences between the two factions. Shia political parties want Islamic law to form the basis for government, a move rejected by Kurds who want autonomy and control of the oil-rich city of Kirkuk.

Ken Living stone is the CEO of the consulting company Global Options Inc and a leading neo-conservative thinker. "When they craft a constitution, which is the first effort that is going to be made by the new Parliament, there they've got to have checks and balances. Without those checks and balances they're probably going to end up with a majority Shia state that is going to create an Islamic Republic," he said.

Living stone says he doesn't trust the Shia religious leaders who placed first in January's election in Iraq. He likened their election to Adolph Hitler's in Germany, telling IPS sometimes people come to power through legitimate elections who later need to be "dealt with."

Like many neo-cons, he also believes Iraq will eventually be fractured with an independent Kurdistan emerging in the North. "The Kurdish self-determination is something that they have had for more than a decade and we should recognise it's a reality," Living stone said.

Then, he says, Kurds who feel oppressed by governments in Iran, Turkey, and Syria, could move to an independent Kurdistan in Iraq rather than destabilising their own ethnically diverse countries.

Living stone isn't the only prominent Republican to say the dissolution of Iraq and the creation of Kurdistan is desirable. His view is shared by Henry Kissinger, who wrote two years ago that a "break up into three states is preferable to refereeing an open-ended civil war." </font size>

-Dawn/The Inter Press News Service

http://www.dawn.com/2005/04/08/int3.htm

.
 
Sunni leader: Boycott may have been mistake

Sunni leader: Boycott may have been mistake
By Yaroslav Trofimov
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

April 7, 2005

TIKRIT, Iraq – Ali Ghaleb, a lawyer from Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, did everything he could to persuade fellow Sunni Arabs to boycott Iraqi elections in January.

So he sounds a bit sheepish when he explains his new job in Tikrit: elected representative. "Maybe the boycott was a mistake," he says.

Ghaleb put himself up for election last year. Then he joined the opposition to the elections and resolved to withdraw, but got kidnapped and missed the deadline to remove his name from the ballot.

On election day, he found himself a reluctant winner.

Now, detecting changing winds in the Sunni Arab community, he has decided that active participation in the political process is the right thing to do after all.

Sunni Arabs have dominated Iraq since it became a country early in the last century. But they largely sat on the sidelines in protest during the January elections. That opened the door for others in Iraq, particularly the ethnic Kurds and Shiite Muslims long oppressed by Sunni governments, to shape the new ruling order.

Today, some Sunnis are concluding that their boycott backfired. With just 17 out of 275 members of parliament, they have little formal say in the country's government.

Many are determined not to make the same mistake again when a constitutional referendum and new elections take place this year or next.

"Next time, we'll even take the sick from their hospital beds and carry them on our shoulders to the polling booths," says Hamed Hamoud, governor of the predominantly Sunni Arab province of Salaheddin.

The mustachioed Ghaleb, 43, had risen to become chairman of the council in Salaheddin Province that was created by the United States in 2003. It was a dangerous position, given that three of the 41 councilmen have been gunned down.

As preparations for national and provincial elections unfolded last year, Ghaleb registered as an independent for a seat in the new, elected Salaheddin legislature. His registration was secret, because Sunni insurgent attacks against anyone involved in the election were common.

Names of the candidates were to be made public just before voting day.

By late fall, however, Sunni Arabs were increasingly opposed to the election. And even Ghaleb was having second thoughts.

At the end of December, the Iraqi Islamic Party, the main legal Sunni group participating in Iraq's U.S.-created interim government, withdrew from the election and asked that it be postponed by at least six months.

In Tikrit, Ghaleb organized a high-profile conference of politicians, religious scholars and tribal leaders from across the so-called Sunni Triangle that adopted a similar call for a boycott.

The following week, Ghaleb – figuring he still had plenty of time to withdraw his name from the candidates' list – led a small delegation to the Shiite Muslim holy city of Najaf.

Their goal: try to persuade Shiite spiritual leader Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani to join their boycott. They met with al-Sistani's son, who was noncommittal.

On the way back to Tikrit, Ghaleb's vehicle was waylaid by Sunni insurgents. Angered by Ghaleb's U.S. connections, they transferred him to a second set of insurgents, who made him read the Koran and a thick book by Said Qutb, an Islamic ideologue from Egypt executed in 1966 and widely revered by Islamic radicals worldwide.

After two weeks, the militants released them, with apologies, saying inquiries in Tikrit had convinced them of Ghaleb's nationalist credentials.

The next day, Jan. 20, Ghaleb returned to Tikrit – one day too late to withdraw his name from the list of candidates for the Jan. 30 election. His 4,739 votes won him a seat. Ghaleb says he didn't vote and that he intended to resign.

But other Sunnis – shocked that the boycott meant that Kurds and Shiites now dominate places where Sunnis make up the bulk of the population – talked him into keeping his seat so they would have a voice.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20050407/news_1n7ghaleb.html
 
MPs Say Deal Reached on Iraqi Gov't, Allawi Excluded

MPs Say Deal Reached on Iraqi Gov't, Allawi Excluded
17 minutes ago

By Luke Baker

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi leaders will announce a government within days and no one from caretaker Prime Minister Iyad Allawi's party will be in the cabinet, lawmakers and people involved in the negotiations said on Sunday.


"Allawi will take no part, his party will have no ministries," a senior official involved in the talks told Reuters, saying the decision had been taken after another round of negotiations on Saturday that lasted more than 10 hours.

"There are still some details to be worked out, but the announcement of the cabinet should be made by Monday," he said.

Politicians have repeatedly said in recent weeks that they are on the cusp of unveiling a government, only for the announcement to fall through. Prime Minister-designate Ibrahim Jaafari theoretically has until May 7 to form a Cabinet.

Talks have been going on for nearly three months, since elections on Jan. 30. Differences between the main Shi'ite alliance and the Kurds, Sunnis and Allawi's party over the distribution of ministries have stalled the process.

The delays have frustrated Iraqis and contributed to a resurgence in guerrilla violence, U.S. and Iraqi officials say.

As talks ended on Saturday, Allawi issued a statement urging all parties to speed up the formation of the government "for the good of the country."

Thaer al-Naqib, Allawi's spokesman, said that if members of Allawi's party were not included in the cabinet, he would still give the government his support.

"We will support the new government, but if we don't get what we deserve from the election result then we are not going to take part in it," Naqib said.

DEAL CLINCHED?

Allawi, whose party won 40 of the 275 seats in parliament, had said he would only participate if his party got four ministries, including either the defense or interior post.

The main Shi'ite alliance, which is the most powerful force in Iraqi politics, said Allawi was asking too much and his demands could not be met. Jaafari is a member of the alliance.

The Kurds, who came second in the election, wanted Allawi, a secular Shi'ite close to Washington, in the government as a counterweight to the Shi'ite bloc, which is mostly religious.

But in the end they determined that forming a government soon, and ensuring that Sunni Muslims were also included, should be the priority, even if that meant leaving Allawi out.

There were concerns that if the delays persisted, Jaafari would fail to form a government by the May 7 deadline, meaning a new prime minister would have to be chosen, potentially throwing the country into even deeper uncertainty.

"It will be a real political crisis and maybe a disaster if Jaafari doesn't meet the deadline. It is not an option for us," Barham Salih, a leading Kurdish official involved in the talks, told Reuters late on Saturday.

"Iraq needs a government and the delay is not justified anymore," he said.



If a government is announced in the next couple of days, it is expected that the Shi'ite alliance will end up with 17 of around 32 ministries, including the Interior Ministry.

The Kurds are expected to receive 8 posts and the Sunnis -- who won only 17 seats in parliament but who all parties are determined to involve in the government so as not to ostracize them -- would take the remainder.

However, it is still not clear how the other two most contentious ministries, Oil and Defense, will be distributed.

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny in Beirut)

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...8&e=2&u=/nm/20050424/ts_nm/iraq_government_dc
 
Just a Little Longer

On the verge of power for the first time in centuries, Iraq's Shiites are holding fire, betting that patience will pay off.

By Rod Nordland
Newsweek

May 2 issue - Hussein Hashimi has a CD-ROM full of pictures of the dead. For the last two months, the young Shiite says, Sunni extremists rampaged through his hometown of Madaen. They torched the local police stations, abducted dozens of members of the local Shiite minority, burned down the mosque and killed not only the imam but his 8-year-old son. Many Shiite families fled; others barricaded themselves in their homes. Last week Iraqi security forces finally came in and restored order. Hashimi has lists of the missing and of the dead who have been identified. He has the names of the alleged perpetrators and a map showing the home of the Sunni he accuses of being responsible for the atrocities.

So is Hashimi fighting back? Not at all. "We just ran away," he says without a trace of embarrassment. "Sistani and the religious authorities in Najaf decided not to use force, so we couldn't do anything." To the Shiites of Iraq, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani's word is law. "We must obey."

Their obedience was tested yet again last week—and again it held firm. In Madaen and villages nearby, corpses bobbed to the surface of the Tigris River until police counted 60. Hashimi and his friends photographed 55 of the bodies and delivered the pictures and lists to Baghdad. Shiite politicians accused the insurgents of ethnic cleansing, and demanded that the caretaker government act. Insurgents in another town near Baghdad, Haditha, responded by kidnapping 19 Shiite fishermen and National Guardsmen, lining them up against a wall in a sports stadium and shooting them dead. Then, during Friday prayers, a suicide car bomber in east Baghdad hit the Shia Al Subeih mosque, killing nine and wounding 20.

In some parts of the world, any one of those incidents would likely have led to a retaliatory bloodbath. But there wasn't a single verifiable incident of a counterstrike from the Shiites of Iraq. One of Sistani's fellow ayatollahs, Mohammed Kadhim al-Haeri, issued a warning to the faithful: "Beware of the witty Saddamites and their followers, Sunnis. Be patient and wise. Beware of sectarian war." His people clearly listened. "If it were not for the wisdom of the Shia leaders, who can control their people, there would have been the probability of civil war," says Jawad Maliky, spokesman for one of Iraq's two leading Shia political parties, the Dawa.

If the leaders' wisdom prevails, Iraq's Shia will have their first elected majority government in the history of any Arab country. Sunni Arab extremists may have no way to prevent it other than by provoking a civil war—and the Shia aren't playing. "You can rule out the insurgents taking over the country," says a Western diplomat. "That's just never going to happen." The Shia and their Kurdish allies constitute 80 percent of the population. Only a sectarian civil war could change everything for the insurgents. "They want to force the Shia to retaliate, so they can create Sunni Arab pockets they can control, but there must be a Shia reaction for that to happen," says Hussein Shahristani, a Shia leader and vice-chairman of the National Assembly. "But this is a last resort. The insurgency is losing ground."

The Shia have already withstood outrages far worse than last week's. Since Baghdad fell, two of their ayatollahs have been assassinated, one in a suicide truck bombing that killed 94 of the cleric's followers. Responsibility for that attack was claimed by the venomously anti-Shiite terrorist leader Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi, leader of the country's branch of Al Qaeda. At the annual Ashoura festival this past February, no fewer than 10 suicide car bombers killed 74 pilgrims and worshippers. "I was nearby when it happened," says Shahristani, "and I was really amazed when these simple, common people began to demonstrate for Islamic unity. But it has taken the Sunnis a bit too long to realize the Shia want to live among them as brothers." Assassins have killed some of Sistani's senior aides and representatives, too, but he has never wavered from his calls for restraint.

Still, everyone's patience has limits. "Our people will not keep silent for long," warned the Najaf governor, Asad Abu Gulal, at a funeral for the mosque bombing victims. Some Shiite politicians see a danger that Iraq's failure to form a new government could prove too much. Iraq's caretaker government, led by the American-appointed interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, is barely functioning. "It's a dangerous game," said the new vice president, Sheikh Ghazi al Yawer, one of the incoming government's few Sunni politicians. "This caretaker government must come to an end." American diplomats and generals, unworried until a few weeks ago, have become alarmed at the ongoing delay. "We can't get anything done," said one American official. "This is no way to fight a war." Even Allawi is fed up with the Assembly members' wrangling. "Sistani should issue a fatwa telling them to get their act together," he told NEWSWEEK.

It's not as easy as it sounds, though. The Transitional Administrative Law, crafted by U.S. and U.N. negotiators along with Iraqi politicians, established a complex set of checks and balances to prevent any one sectarian group from dominating the government. Forming a new government requires a two-thirds majority, which means that its shape is dictated not only by the Assembly's Shia majority but also by the second-largest bloc, the Kurdish parties. Dawa politician Ibrahim Jaafari was named prime minister on April 7, but 31 cabinet positions are still being hotly debated. In an interview with NEWSWEEK last Thursday, Jaafari confidently asserted that he expected a government by the end of the day. "We did our best so that the role of our brothers the Sunnis in the cabinet would be noticeable and strong," he said. Even so, the week ended with the deadlock still unresolved.

The basic plan seemed straightforward enough. The Shiites and the Kurds would divvy the cabinet seats according to their relative populations; then each would voluntarily cede a couple of ministries to the Sunnis, who had chosen to boycott the elections and thus are underrepresented in the Assembly. Sistani, eager to persuade Sunnis that their future lies with the government rather than with the insurgency, insisted that Shiite leaders give them prominent political roles. The Kurds offered to kick in an extra ministry, if the Shiites would match that by giving up two more positions, but Jaafari couldn't get his party's various factions to accept such a sacrifice. In the end they offered the Sunnis only four cabinet posts, and the deal collapsed. Still, some of the Assembly members were practically giddy at the prospect of democracy in action. "A Kurdish filibuster," one Kurdish politician marvels. "This is exhilarating." His mood quickly turns serious. "We are at the peak of our influence. But if we push too far we could lose."

Even thornier was the decision to give the Defense Ministry to the Sunnis. The thought infuriated Shiite hard-liners. Dawa and the Shiites' other major religious party, SCIRI, have been particularly vocal about their desire to ferret out Baathist infiltrators in the government. Sunni politicians feared that any such effort would become a full-blown purge. They were already complaining that some ministries in the interim government had become almost exclusively Shiite enclaves, and they predicted that a Sunni minister of Defense would be no more than a figurehead, wielding no real control. "The Shia want to have a token Sunni under their thumb in Defense," one Sunni politician said.

Madaen is now at the center of the two sides' dispute over the security services. As Hashimi's story flashed through Baghdad from one teller to the next, it metastasized into a wild account of 50, 75 or 150 Shiites, men, women and children being taken hostage. Shiite politicians charged that insurgents in Madaen were brazenly abducting Shiites in broad daylight from the streets. But after security forces gained control of the town, Iraq's Interior minister, Falah Naqib (a Sunni), announced that no hostages had been found. In response, some Shiites argued that the failure to find hostages merely proved the longstanding contention of Naqib's critics that his ministry is riddled with infiltrators. Sunni politicians retaliated with their own wild allegation that the Madaen's real "abductees" were Sunnis who had been rounded up by local police and jailed incommunicado.

The facts are scarcely less chilling than the rumors. According to local police, as well as reports from Iraqi journalists who reached Madaen, most of the corpses were unidentified young men who had been killed elsewhere and dumped in the river. Iraqi police said the victims who could be identified came from cities and villages up and down the Tigris valley, particularly from towns astride the highways that connect Baghdad to the south. Those roads, sometimes known as the throat of Baghdad, have been severed repeatedly by insurgents who throw up impromptu checkpoints, summarily killing any Shiites they find. The killings had grown so frequent by last year that some local Shiites organized a vigilante force, but Sistani's aides quickly forced them to disband.

At times the insurgents have practically cut off Baghdad's Shiite majority from the holy cities of Najaf and Karbala and the Shiite heartland to the south. Some Shiites are convinced that Sunni extremists are trying to drive them out of a whole arc of small towns around the capital's rim. "This is ethnic cleansing," said Maliky. "They are surrounding Baghdad, and they want to eliminate the Shia. Madaen is the leadership point for them."

Hashimi's grisly CD-ROM seemed only to confirm those dire suspicions. Shiite politicians in Baghdad seized on the evidence to demand a crackdown on the extremists. Even so, the calls were for tougher police action, not vigilante moves. "Thank God almighty the place has stayed quiet," Yawer says. "There are some politicians who are trying to stir it up, and if they did, it would be like a fire on dry hay. I really must raise my hat to Sistani and the Shia marjiya [senior religious leaders] telling people to calm down."

Iraq's Shiites have centuries of practice at swallowing their anger. They have been a subject people for most of the past millennium, even though Shiism was born in Iraq. Many Sunnis seem utterly convinced that they were born to rule. Mishan al Jibouri is one of the few Sunni politicians who ignored the boycott calls and won a National Assembly seat. He insists on referring to Baghdad's Shiite majority as "guests" and makes it clear that he regards them as unwelcome ones. "Sunni Arabs were the ones who built Baghdad," he says, "and ever since the Abbassid Dynasty they have been ruling it." He insists that the Americans are plotting to hand the place over to Tehran.

Many of Iraq's Sunnis share that suspicion. "Every day we are approaching the moment of explosion," Jibouri warns. "Since Saddam fell, I've never been as concerned about the possibility of civil war as I am today." The risk of a breakdown is undeniable. But the ayatollahs seem determined to keep it from happening. Iraq's Shiites have kept their patience for 1,000 years and more. For the sake of assuming power at last, they may succeed in holding out a little longer.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7615458/site/newsweek/
 
US says Iraqi insurgent threat grows again

Mon Apr 25, 2:57 PM ET

Iraqi insurgents have shown improved coordination and greater tactical sophistication in a new surge of attacks following a sharp decline after national elections in January, US defense officials said.

The increased violence comes amid a stalemate over the formation of a new Iraqi government, which US officials worry is dissipating an opportunity opened by the January 30 elections to undercut Sunni support for the insurgency.

"It's not over. Nobody thinks this is over," said a senior defense official, who asked not to be identified.

Attacks fell from about 90 a day before the elections to about 40 a day for several weeks after the vote, Pentagon officials said. But then about two weeks ago the number of attacks rose to about 50 a day.

More significant than the number of attacks is that the insurgent attacks are better coordinated than in the past and more sophisticated, said the senior defense official.

Moreover, he said, members of the former regime have been re-establishing links with foreign fighters led by militants such as Abu Musab al Zarqawi.

He said there was "a definite coincidence of interests" between the two.

Defense officials point to several coordinated attacks involving unusually large numbers of insurgents, and in some case multiple suicide car bombs, as examples of the new tactics.

The first was what military officials described as a well-coordinated ambush south of Baghdad on March 20 on a US military convoy by some 40 to 50 insurgents firing rocket propelled grenades and small arms. Seven US soldiers were wounded. US officials said 26 rebels were killed.

On April 2, the Abu Ghraib prison was assaulted at night by 50-60 guerrillas. The attack opened with a car bomb on one side of the prison, followed by mortar, rocket propelled grenade and small arms fire, and punctuated by a second car bomb on the other side of the prison.

Officials said 44 US soldiers and 12 prisoners were wounded.

On April 11, 40-50 insurgents struck a US military outpost in the western city of al-Qaim near the Syrian border, detonating three suicide car bombs. Three marines were reported wounded and the insurgents nearly breached the compound with a car bomb.

A Pentagon official noted that two attacks over the weekend each featured double car bombings.

US commanders have played down the attacks as "desperate acts by desperate individuals."

Pentagon spokesman Lawrence DiRita said last week that commanders wondered whether insurgents were marshalling their "dwindling capacity" to carry out fewer but better coordinated and more spectacular attacks.

But a violent new phase of the insurgency could set back US hopes for making significant reductions in its 142,000-strong force next year.

"There is a heightened level of interest because this clearly discernable down trend (in attacks) has changed in the last couple of weeks," the Pentagon official said.

"Does it indicate more planning, more coordination, more sophistication on the part of insurgents? Or is it attributable to some other factor?" he said.

The official suggested that one factor could be a slackening by the Iraqi security forces as they await the new government.

US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld warned Iraq's new Shiite leaders during a visit to Baghdad earlier this month against purging the country's security forces.

Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz followed up with phone calls to Iraqi leaders last week as part of a coordinated effort by top administration officials to press for the naming of a new government, the senior defense official said.

http://beta.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20050425/pl_afp/usiraqmilitary
 
New Iraqi Premier Announces End of Impasse Over Cabinet​

By ROBERT F. WORTH
and JOHN F. BURNS

BAGHDAD, Iraq, April 27 - In a long-awaited breakthrough, politicians have agreed on the makeup of the new Iraqi cabinet, Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari declared today.

Dr. Jaafari did not, however, announce the names of the officials, which must be submitted for approval to President Jalal Talabani and by a simple majority in the National Assembly. Dr. Talabani is believed to have already given his approval, and assembly agreement is considered a formality.

The prime minister has been under pressure to form the government as soon as possible, after weeks of divisive negotiations.

The announcement came as gunmen shot and killed a member of the assembly today outside her house in eastern Baghdad, an official at the Interior Ministry said.

She was identified as Sheika Lamea abed Khaddouri, a member of the party headed by the interim prime minister, Iyad Allawi.

She had survived two previous assassination attempts, one when she was fired upon as she was parking in a garage, and another as gunmen attacked her as she was driving in the capital, destroying her car. Ms. Khaddouri had moved from house to house in Baghdad in an effort to head off any further attacks.

Ms. Khaddouri, who was unmarried and in her 40's, was the first member of the 275-member National Assembly to be killed. She lived with her brothers in the Shiite neighborhood of Binouq and was given the honorific of Sheika because she was the daughter of a prominent Shiite leader of the Rabiya tribe, which is based in Kut, 100 miles south of Baghdad.

A longtime friend and fellow member of the assembly said Ms. Khaddouri was shot in the face by three gunmen when she opened the door to her house at 3:30 p.m.

"They chose her as a target because she spoke out and took little care who she criticized," the friend, Haifa el-Azawi, said.

Ms. Khadawi was one of 90 women in the assembly, which was elected on Jan. 30. She entered politics after serving as a prominent member of an Iraqi human rights organization.

Politicians have been frequent targets of insurgents, and Dr. Allawi himself survived an assassination attempt last week.

Today's attack took place before Dr. Jaafari's announcement, which came after last-minute negotiations with a Sunni political party led by Sheik Ghazi al-Yawar, who was named last month as one of two vice presidents in the new government.

Much of the last-minute negotiations appeared to center on who would be named defense minister, a post that was expected to go to Sadoun al-Dulaymi, a former general in Saddam Hussein's army, who fled abroad and joined the external opposition before Mr. Hussein's ouster in the spring of 2003.

The three months it has taken to form a new government has been described by the United States as being a significant factor in the deteriorating security condition.

When newly elected provincial governments, many of them headed by Islamist politicians, began replacing governors and provincial district and city police chiefs who had not been approved by the caretaker government in Baghdad, it led to a power vacuum, American officials have said.

That situation, in the view of the United States, led to armed confrontations between groups loyal to contending figures to these positions, which encouraged insurgents.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/27/i...&en=a26a7f0d6c94697e&ei=5094&partner=homepage
 
Six Iraqi neighbors pledge support as US troops cleared of Italian's death

Six Iraqi neighbors pledge support as US troops cleared of Italian's death
2 hours, 21 minutes ago

BAGHDAD (AFP) -
Iraq's neighbors pledged more security cooperation for the new government in Baghdad, as the US military cleared its soldiers of blame in an Italian secret agent's shooting in the Iraqi capital.

The US military decision is likely to increase friction between the two countries and renew calls for the withdrawal of Italy's 3,000 soldiers from Iraq.

Six neighbors of Iraq, plus Egypt and Bahrain, threw their support behind the new government Saturday, as Iraqi foreign minister Hoshyar Zebari urged more help from his counterparts in an Istanbul meeting.

Zebari was on his first mission abroad after his re-appointment in Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari's cabinet. Neighboring
Iran, Jordan, Kuwait, Syria, Saudi Arabia and Turkey all gave their support in the process.

"We expect more" from our neighbors, Zebari told reporters. "Our neighbors could be more constructive, more positive and extend genuine aid and assistance in many fields to us."

But Turkey's prime minister warned that Iraq was becoming a "training ground for terrorist groups."

In its new report, the US military exonerated its troops over the killing of secret agent Nicola Calipari after Rome and Washington failed to agree on the conclusions of a joint investigation.

The 42-page report -- much of it censored -- said the Italians had not informed US authorities in advance of their plans to rush Italian journalist Guiliana Sgrena to the airport on March 4 after she was freed by kidnappers.

Italy will publish Monday its own report into the killing, foreign ministry sources quoted by Italy's ANSA news agency said Saturday.

Meanwhile, Iraq's new cabinet remained under pressure even before it is sworn in, with Prime Minister Jaafari struggling to complete his government line-up as insurgents multiplied car bombings and other attacks.

A US soldier was shot dead Saturday by insurgents in Khaladiyah, west of Baghdad, bringing to eight the number of GIs killed in action in the country over the past three days, the US military said in a statement.

A police officer told AFP Saturday that the Tigris River had washed up more than 20 corpses in the past few days in Aziziyah, about 90 kilometres (55 miles) south of Baghdad.

Ten days ago, a police lieutenant colonel based in Suwayrah, about 40 kilometres (25 miles) south of the capital, told AFP that the Tigris had recently washed up 57 bodies of men and children in the area.

The two river towns are located in an insurgent stronghold, according to government officials.

At least six people were killed Saturday and 30 wounded in four separate car bombings in Iraq, three of them targeting army patrols.

In east Baghdad, a suicide driver ploughed into a joint Iraqi-US convoy, killing two civilians, an interior ministry official told AFP.

Police said four Iraqi soldiers were also wounded in the attack, which was later claimed by the group of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Al-Qaeda's top man in Iraq.

A second car bomb later exploded outside a building holding a meeting of senior Sunni leaders from the Council on National Dialogue, killing one guard and injuring 10 people. The Sunni leaders themselves escaped unscathed.

A third car explosion, set off by a suicide bomber at about 6:00 pm (1400 GMT), targeted a US military convoy near Al-Shaab stadium in the east of the capital, police said.

It killed two civilians, injured six, and damaged four passing cars, but the convoy escaped unscathed, police added.

A fourth car bomb, in the northern town of Mosul, killed a female passer-by and wounded four Iraqi commandos. Police said a suicide bomber had driven his vehicle at a police convoy.

The attacks were seen as a challenge to the new democratically elected government, approved by parliament on Thursday almost three months after landmark elections.

Jaafari, who said fighting the insurgency would be a top priority, was still bogged down in discussions on the full make-up of his cabinet, which still lacked a defence minister.

Several other key portfolios, including oil, also remained in play, amid continuing haggling along ethnic and sectarian lines among government allies.

Sunnis, under-represented in parliament because of their boycott of the election, want a greater say in the government.

Vice President Ghazi al-Yawar, a Sunni tribal leader, warned Thursday that five Sunni ministers already in the cabinet might quit if the community thought it was being short-changed.

In the United States, Lynndie England, the US soldier photographed infamously holding a leash attached to the neck of a naked Iraqi inmate at the Abu Ghraib prison, was expected to plead guilty to reduced charges at a court-martial.

England's attorney Rick Hernandez told The Washington Post that his client will plead guilty to two counts of conspiracy, four counts of maltreating prisoners and one count of dereliction of duty at her court martial in Fort Hood, Texas, Monday. In turn Army prosecutors agreed to drop two other charges.

The deal reduces England's maximum sentence to 11 years in prison, Hernandez told the Post.

England, 22, faced up to 16-1/2 years in prison had she been convicted on all original nine charges.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2005050...4uFOrgF;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 
U.S. Moves to Reassert Itself in Iraq Affairs

As insurgent attacks grow, American officials are returning to a more active role to improve services and foster an inclusive government.

By Paul Richter and Ashraf Khalil
Times Staff Writers

May 20, 2005

WASHINGTON — Facing an intensifying insurgency and a frail government in Baghdad, the Bush administration has reluctantly changed course to deepen its involvement in the process of running Iraq.

U.S. officials are taking a more central and visible role in mediating among political factions, pushing for the government to be more inclusive and helping resuscitate public services. At the same time, Washington is maintaining pressure on Iraqi officials to upgrade the nation's fledgling security forces.

The change comes at a time when confidence in the leaders elected in January has been falling and U.S. officials have grown more pessimistic about how soon Iraqi security forces will be able to take charge of the counterinsurgency effort.

Both before and after the election, the Bush administration tried to scale back its role and shift decisions to the Iraqi leadership. U.S. officials had feared that a continued high profile might prove counterproductive, giving the impression that Iraqi government leaders were not acting independently.

But in recent weeks, as formation of the new government inched along and the insurgency escalated, some Iraqi officials began telling the Americans that they needed more support and mediation to overcome differences among factions, U.S. and Iraqi officials said.

"These are Iraqi issues. But that doesn't mean we can't make use of American experience and friendly advice," said Karim Khutar Almusawi of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a leading Shiite Muslim political party.

The new American approach came clearly into focus this week. Deputy Secretary of State Robert B. Zoellick, visiting Iraq on Thursday, called for "an inclusive process" in governing the country and urged action on a new constitution. His trip came days after a visit by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

Rice's visit, which carried a signal of American support for the fledgling government, was "very welcome," Almusawi said.

U.S. officials acknowledged that they were pressing hard for Iraq to move ahead. Although Iraqis are making the choices, the officials said, Washington has "red lines" that its partners must not cross. For instance, the U.S. insists that the Iraqi government be democratic and that the country be pluralistic, yet united, one official said.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of rules that forbid many U.S. officials from talking publicly unless they restrict themselves to the language of prepared policy statements.

One official said that although the Iraqis were "the ultimate determinants of their own destiny … we have 140,000 troops here, and they are getting shot at."

"We're also spending a lot of money. We don't dictate action plans," the official said. "But we constantly remind them that we're working toward the same goal, and we have our 'red lines.' "

Another U.S. official said the administration had been pressuring the recently elected Iraqi leaders to move faster to organize their government because of American worries that their slow start and fractious behavior since the election had heartened insurgents and spurred an increase in violence.

He insisted, however, that although American officials would push the Iraqis, they didn't want to make decisions for them. That, he said, would undermine the legitimacy of the Iraqi government and cause the United States to become even further entangled in the problems of a country that it one day wants to leave.

"There are many people in Iraq who want us to take ownership of some of these problems," he said. "We can't do it."

During their visits to Iraq, Zoellick and Rice made it clear that Washington's top priority was to get the Iraqi government to include greater numbers of Sunni Muslim Arabs, the minority group that has been most alienated and is considered to be behind much of the insurgency.

The U.S. diplomats urged Shiite Muslim and Kurdish leaders to draw more Sunni Arabs into the government, give them a larger role in the committee drafting a constitution and write the document in a way that will convince Sunnis that they have a place in the new Iraq. The committee organized last week to write the constitution includes only two Sunni Arabs among its 55 members.

Zoellick told reporters Thursday that although many Sunni Arabs boycotted the election in January, they now "feel they have missed the boat and want to get engaged in the process."

During Rice's visit, she sought to mediate a problem among Kurdish Iraqis that has drawn little international notice, but which some Iraqis believe could become a major political stumbling block.

The top U.S. diplomat met in the northern city of Irbil with Massoud Barzani, president of Kurdistan and leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, who has been increasingly at odds with the KDP's long-standing rival party, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.

The two parties forged an alliance during the election, but Barzani and PUK leader Jalal Talabani, now the president of Iraq, have disagreed over which party will have most influence in Iraqi Kurdistan.

The standoff has hampered the government's progress in Kurdistan and prevented the newly elected regional parliament from holding its first meeting.

In private talks, Rice urged Barzani to come to an understanding with the PUK and to become more engaged in the work of the government in Baghdad, U.S. and Iraqi officials said.

Her public remarks about the meeting were more general, citing the "very important role Mr. Barzani can play" in forging the new constitution.

Rice also made it clear that the United States wanted to put more effort into helping the new government improve lagging public services, including providing more electricity and gasoline. Iraq still has long lines at gas stations, and only two-thirds of its electricity needs are met. The continuing shortages are believed to be key reasons that public confidence has been slipping.

Signs emerged during the week that the U.S. diplomats' visits may be helping matters.

Talabani and Barzani plan to meet this week to discuss their differences, according to Iraqi political officials and reports in the Kurdish press.

In Baghdad this week, Sunni and Shiite leaders have been discussing ways to involve more Sunnis in the constitution drafting process as advisors, to provide a wider range of opinions and more credibility. This weekend, about 1,000 Sunni elders from a variety of backgrounds are scheduled to meet in the capital to consider candidates for advisory positions.

U.S. officials are also hoping that international organizations can help, analysts said. This week, a United Nations team headed by South African lawyer Nicholas "Fink" Haysom, a onetime aide to former President Nelson Mandela, was formally asked to help craft the Iraqi constitution.

The Americans "are hoping this will give the process some credibility, inside Iraq and maybe in the eyes of Sunnis outside Iraq too," said Patrick Clawson, deputy director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and a longtime Iraq analyst.

James Dobbins, who has been a top-level U.S. envoy to Afghanistan, Bosnia-Herzegovina and other beleaguered regions, said it was essential for outside powers to become engaged in helping shattered and divided countries find a path to reconciliation.

The recent experiences in war-torn Afghanistan and the Balkans show that "you need international process to get this done," said Dobbins, who is now head of Rand Corp.'s International Security and Defense Policy Center.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationw...0may20,0,1497343.story?coll=la-home-headlines
 
Many Iraqis See Sectarian Roots in New Killings

By SABRINA TAVERNISE

BAGHDAD, Iraq, May 26 - No one knows who tortured and killed Hassan al-Nuaimi, a Sunni Arab cleric whose body was found in an empty lot here last week, with a hole drilled in his head and both eyes missing. But the various theories have a distinctly sectarian tinge.

The Shiite police chief investigating the death said he suspected Sunni Arab extremists who have driven much of the insurgency in Iraq, much of it aimed at Shiites. The Sunni family mourning the cleric pointed the finger at the Badr Organization, a Shiite militia. But with Mr. Nuaimi buried, the truth, as so often with killings in Iraq, seems to be lost in rumor and allegations.

The only sure thing is that Mr. Nuaimi and another Sunni man who helped write sermons were killed within 12 hours of their disappearance from a mixed Sunni-Shiite neighborhood in northeast Baghdad.

Their deaths, amid violence that has taken more than 550 lives across Iraq this month, renewed concern that the bloodshed may be shifting ever more toward crudely sectarian killings.

Hard-line Sunni leaders have pressed the case. "The killing in Iraq now is according to religious identity," said Sheik Abdel Nasir al-Janabi, a religious Sunni and a hard-line member of the National Dialogue Council, a Sunni political group that claims to have ties to the insurgency. "Now you're killed because you're a Sunni Arab."

Shiite leaders, including Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's most powerful Shiite cleric, have responded to such talk with calls for calm and renewed appeals to Shiites that they place their trust in Iraq's fledgling democracy, not revenge killings.

But the urgency of the Shiite leaders' appeals reflects a deepening fear that the welter of allegations about Shiite death squads going after Sunni Arabs, true or false, may create a new reality, prompting still more sectarian killings and pushing the country ever closer to the brink of civil war.

"We are drifting into a sectarian society," said Ghassan al-Atiyya, a secular Shiite and the director of the Iraqi Foundation for Development and Democracy, a Baghdad research institute. "The Americans, instead of strengthening liberal and secular, they are now hostage of Sciri," he said, referring to a religious Shiite political group, "and Kurds."

"They let the genie out of the bottle," Mr. Atiyya said.

Iraq's Shiite majority were the main victims of Saddam Hussein's repression and have been among the principal targets of the insurgents. On Monday insurgents killed at least 33 Shiites in three car bomb attacks in Iraq, and on Thursday two members of Shiite political parties were assassinated.

For the past year Shiites have been attacked at mosques, weddings, funerals and crowded marketplaces. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the most ruthless insurgent leader, has urged still more killing, calling Shiites "apostates" and usurpers of the Sunni Arab primacy in Iraq that ended with the overthrow of Mr. Hussein. On Wednesday his group boasted of killing Shiites in the northern city of Tal Afar.

But when Iraq got its first-ever Shiite majority government three weeks ago, the transition was accompanied by a new wave of terror that included attacks on Sunni Arab leaders, including clerics, and even fruit and vegetable sellers. Sunni leaders have blamed Shiite militias that they say work behind the scenes with official army and police forces, a charge that Shiites deny.

Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari suggested Thursday that there might be some truth in Sunni allegations of Shiite death squads. "I am alarmed," Dr. Jaafari said. "We will act very strongly against those who take the law into their own hands."

Sunni leaders have accused Shiite-led security forces of raiding mosques, arresting more than 300 Sunni clerics and worshipers, and killing several of them, including Mr. Nuaimi. His family has said he was taken from his home by men wearing Iraqi security force uniforms.

On Monday the Iraqi Islamic Party, a Sunni political group, condemned several sets of killings that it said had been carried out by government forces.

Sheik Khalaf al-Aliyan, a member of the National Dialogue Council, a coalition of Sunni political leaders, said he had evidence that Shiite political parties had drawn up a list of 4,000 Sunnis they intended to assassinate, a charge that Shiite leaders have dismissed as preposterous.

"We are approaching the red line," said Saleh Mutlak, a moderate member of the council, which has also urged Sunni participation in the political process.

Most Iraqis, whether Shiite or Sunni, Arab or Kurd, Muslim or Christian, have held tightly to a legend about the Iraqi past. Iraqis, they say, have never defined themselves primarily by religion or ethnic origin but have submerged themselves in a common identity as Iraqis. Even now, reporters who ask people which community they belong to tend to get a common answer. "I am Iraqi," men and women will say, or, with equal insistence, "I am a Muslim."

Even so, in the last two years a strengthened sense of religious and ethnic identity began to course through Iraqi Shiite and Kurdish communities, which had endured the most repression under Mr. Hussein. Moderate Sunnis worry that the newfound identity combined with Shiites' and Kurds' new positions of power may deepen sectarian rifts.

"I came back to Iraq with the assumption that these religious and sectarian tendencies were not that strong," said Adnan Pachachi, 81, a Sunni statesman and former foreign minister, who returned from exile in 2003 and became one of the most trusted advisers of the American occupation authorities. "But in times of trouble people tend to go toward religion, and the religious parties make use of that very skillfully."

The shift in power has been a major irritant. Shiites, for years a downtrodden underclass, took power in elections in January and now control Iraq's government, Parliament and much of its police and security forces. Sunni Arabs, who ran Iraq from the time of the Ottoman Empire, are chafing under that rule but have little leverage after boycotting the elections.

That has left Sunni Arabs with a bitterness that leaves them more open to hard-liners' appeals.

"There's a sense of alienation and embitterment among Sunnis," said Hassan al-Bazzaz, an international relations professor at Baghdad University and director of a center that studies public opinion. "Maybe that's why a lot of them are ready to share suspicions about what's happening."

A sampling of opinions at Friday Prayer at Baghdad's main hard-line Sunni mosque, called the Mother of All Battles, showed sharp Sunni Arab anger at Shiites, while Shiites near Al Mohsen Mosque in Sadr City, a Shiite district, expressed little or no anger.

For Sunnis, perhaps the strongest symbol of Shiite bullying is the Shiite militia called the Badr Brigade. The group was formed in the 1980's in Iran as a fighting force of Iraqi Shiites opposed to Mr. Hussein. Many of its members returned after the American invasion. The group was ordered to disband but still exists informally, with a former member now running the Interior Ministry.

Saad Qindeel, the head of the political bureau of the party affiliated with the group, said it had put down its weapons and become a civil organization. But an American official and Iraqi officials say the group is used to gather intelligence.

There was evidence of that in at least one set of arrests two weeks ago, when according to a Shiite commander of an army commando unit called the Wolf Brigade, Badr intelligence pointed out three Palestinians and an Iraqi who they said had carried out a suicide bombing in Baghdad.

"They are very active," Mr. Pachachi said of the Badr Brigade. "This is the fear that many Sunnis have, that the Badr Brigade will be using the great advantage of being in the government to strengthen their position and try to defeat their opponents."

And small signs of sectarian strife have surfaced in Baghdad neighborhoods.

In a mysterious incident earlier this month, a Shiite student at the Baghdad University College of Pharmacy was killed after arguing with a Sunni dean over a rally he wanted to hold to celebrate the new government. Protests ensued, and the college was closed for several days.

A rash of five or six arrests of Sunni businessmen in the last two weeks has raised concerns among wealthy Sunnis that a campaign is being waged against them. "Anybody who is Sunni and has money is a target," said one member of the Iraqi Bankers Association, who declined to give his name out of fear that he would be arrested. "This is a witch hunt."

Shiite leaders, now in power, have called for restraint despite the killings of Shiites. Even Moktada alSadr, a notoriously rebellious cleric who led an uprising against Americans last summer, offered himself as a mediator on Sunday night.

At the funeral of a Shiite cleric who was gunned down in his car last week, the words of Abdel Karim al-Jazaery, a close friend of the cleric, were typical.

"The point is to make Muslims two parts, to divide the good people, Sunni and Shiite," Mr. Jazaery said of the killers. "God willing, they won't succeed."

Outside the funeral tent, members of the Wolf Brigade stood guard.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/27/i...&en=a46fca2805716859&ei=5094&partner=homepage
 
Key Sunni, Shiite groups vow to ‘preserve unity’

Peace pledge comes as Iraqi forces gear up for huge offensive

The Associated Press
May 28, 2005

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Two of Iraq’s most influential Shiite and Sunni organizations agreed Saturday to try to ease sectarian tensions pushing the country toward civil war as the government prepared to take its battle against the insurgency to Baghdad’s streets.

The new effort to make peace came as attacks killed a U.S. soldier and at least 45 Iraqis over the past two days — including 10 people returning from a religious pilgrimage in Syria whose bodies were left in the border city of Qaim, as well as three suicide bombers and three men killed when a roadside bomb they planted exploded prematurely.

“We are all Muslims, and usually problems happen between one family. We want to solve them on the basis of Islamic brotherhood,” said one Sunni official, Isam Al Rawi.

In an Internet message, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s Al-Qaida in Iraq on Saturday launched a tirade against Shiites, accusing them of targeting Islam and especially Sunni Muslims in what appeared to be an attempt to stoke hatreds and sectarian violence.

“There’s no mosque or honor that has been violated or Muslim who has been insulted in Iraq without the help of the (Shiites),” said the statement, posted on an Islamic Web site.

It accused Iraq’s majority Shiites of aiding “the Jews,” apparently referring to U.S. troops and officials in Iraq. The mocking statement was allegedly posted by Abu Maysara al-Iraqi, a spokesman for the group. Its authenticity could not be verified.

The group purportedly claimed responsibility for twin suicide car bombings in Sinjar. The attacks, 75 miles northwest of Mosul city, killed seven Iraqis and injured another 38 at the entrance to an Iraqi military base, according to hospital officials.

Another al-Qaida affiliate in Iraq, the Ansar al-Sunnah Army, announced the death of a Japanese contractor it abducted earlier this month.

Iraqis plan massive offensive
Meanwhile, Iraqi police and army units prepared to launch a crackdown Sunday in Baghdad that will include helping cordon off the city and erecting hundreds of checkpoints in and around the capital, according to defense and security officials. More than 40,000 Iraqi soldiers and policemen, supported by U.S. troops, will deploy to the new checkpoints and later begin street-to-street sweeps.

Operation Lightning has received planning and logistical support from U.S. troops who are keen to train and equip Iraqi security forces so they can eventually take over security in the capital.

“This is a significant move by the Iraqi leadership. It is a transition from a defensive posture to an offensive posture. It is raising the profile of the Iraqi security forces in pursuit of attacking terrorism in Baghdad,” said U.S. Air Force Brig. Gen. Don Alston, spokesman for the multinational force in Iraq.

In an effort to mitigate escalating sectarian tensions, officials from the Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars, considered close to some insurgent groups, met with representatives from the Badr Brigades — the military wing of Iraq’s largest Shiite party, the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq.

Organized by the anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, the gathering aimed to smother accusations that began earlier this month when the association’s leader, Harith al-Dhari, accused the Badr Brigades of killing Sunnis and executing their clerics. A number of Shiite clerics were also killed.

The brigades not only denied the charges, they accused the Sunni association of failing to condemn the insurgency and of trying to “push Iraq into a sectarian conflict.”

Push to ‘preserve unity’
Large portraits of the burly, black-bearded cleric al-Sadr adorned the walls inside the building, located in a narrow back alley in northern Baghdad’s suburb of Kazimiyah, a Shiite stronghold.

“We overcame many obstacles. The two parties agreed to serving Iraq and to preserve its unity,” al-Sadr official Abdul Hadi Al Daraji said.

He said another meeting would be held during the week and a national gathering would be called once the crisis between the two organizations was resolved.

Akihiko Saito, 44, a Japanese contractor, was among a group of five foreign workers — four of them earlier confirmed dead — who were ambushed in the Anbar province west of Baghdad.

Iraqi confirmation of Saito’s death followed Friday’s Internet release of a video showing the bloodied body of an Asian man, apparently Saito. An Ansar statement said he died after being wounded during clashes after the ambush.

More than 200 foreigners have been abducted in Iraq, and at least 30 killed.

A U.S. soldier died from wounds from a homemade bomb near Diyara, west of Baghdad, the military said Saturday. The soldier, who died Friday, was assigned to the 155th Brigade Combat Team, II Marine Expeditionary Force.

As of Saturday, at least 1,655 U.S. military members have died since the Iraq war began in March 2003, according to an AP count.

The Iraqi army captured two Iraqis on Saturday they suspect shot down an American helicopter and killed its two-man crew on Thursday near Buhriz, north of Baghdad, said Maj. Steven Warren of the 3rd Brigade Combat Team.

In Syria, the Arab League’s secretary general, Amr Moussa, said the league was “ready to send advisers to help and offer assistance” to the 55-member Iraqi commission charged with drafting the new constitution.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7897149/
 
U.S. Forces Mistakenly Detain Sunni Chief

U.S. Forces Mistakenly Detain Sunni Chief
By PAUL GARWOOD, Associated Press Writer 9 minutes ago

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The U.S. military nearly set off a sectarian crisis Monday by mistakenly arresting the leader of Iraq's top Sunni Muslim political party, while two suicide bombers killed about 30 police, and U.S. fighter jets destroyed insurgent strongholds near Syria's border.

Northeast of Baghdad, an Iraqi military aircraft crashed Monday during a mission with four American troops and one Iraqi on board, the U.S. military said. It was not immediately clear what their condition was or even what kind of aircraft it was.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. military in Baghdad, Sgt. Kate Neuman, said the four Americans were military personnel.

And on Memorial Day, the U.S. military said American soldier Spc. Phillip Sayles, of the 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment, was killed in an attack Saturday in the northern city of Mosul. As of Monday, at least 1,657 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

The arrest of Iraqi Islamic Party leader Mohsen Abdul-Halim, his three sons and four guards did little to help efforts to entice Iraq's once-dominant Sunni community back into the political fold. The Sunnis lost their influence following Saddam Hussein's ouster two years ago.

Many believe the Sunni fall from grace, and parallel rise to power of Iraq's majority Shiite population, is spurring the raging insurgency, driving many disenchanted Sunnis to launch attacks that have killed more than 760 people since the April 28 announcement of the Shiite-dominated new government. Bringing Sunnis back into the political fold could soothe some tensions.

In a commitment to end the violence, Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari vowed that "Operation Lightning," the large-scale campaign that began Sunday, would rid Baghdad of militants and, in particular, suicide car bombers, the deadliest and regular weapon of choice for insurgents.

"We needed to clean up some of our problem districts and that's why Operation Lightning was launched ... to quickly come to the protection of civilians and stop the bloodshed," al-Jaafari said at a news conference.

But renewed carnage south of the capital showed the difficulty of his job.

Two suicide bombers blew themselves up outside the mayor's office in Hillah, 60 miles south of Baghdad. The attackers waded into a crowd of 500 policemen staging an early-morning protest of a government decision to disband their special forces unit.

Staggering the detonations by one minute and 100 yards apart to maximize the casualties, the bombers killed at least 27 policemen and wounded 118 in an attack that scattered body parts, blood and shards of glass across a wide area, said police Capt. Muthana Khalid Ali.

The Polish military, which controls the area, said about 30 Iraqis were killed. The conflicting tolls were apparently linked to the difficulty in trying to count the dead because of all the body parts strewn around the blast site.

"I just saw a ball of fire and flying pieces of flesh. After that, confused policemen started firing into the air," he said.

In an apparent claim of responsibility, al-Qaida in Iraq said in an Internet statement that one of its members carried out an attack "against a group of special Iraqi forces." The statement's authenticity could not be verified.

Militants regard Iraqi security forces as prime targets in their campaign against the U.S. military, which hinges its eventual exit from Iraq on the ability of local soldiers and police to handle the insurgency.

Violence across northern Iraq killed at least nine others, with gunmen slaying a senior Kurdish official in Kirkuk and a Sunni tribal leader in Mosul, a roadside bomb killing a civilian in Baqouba and Iraqi soldiers shooting to death six insurgents in Mosul and northern Anbar province.

U.S. warplanes and helicopters attacked insurgents near Husaybah, on the Syrian border, west of Baghdad, the military said.

"There were enemy casualties, but due to the destruction of the buildings from which they were firing, we are unable to determine the number of enemy fighters killed and wounded," military spokeswoman Lt. Blanca Binstock said.

U.S. forces have launched several offensives in western Iraq aimed at rooting out Sunni extremists crisscrossing the desert frontier with Syria to smuggle in foreign fighters and weapons.

Fears of sectarian violence have whipped across Iraq amid the latest violence, which has seen Shiite and Sunni clerics kidnapped, tortured and shot.

In recent weeks, Shiite and Sunni leaders have met to try to settle their differences, with both camps declaring their intent to work to end the violence.

But Monday's roughly 12-hour detention of Abdul-Hamid flared tensions yet again, causing Sunni leaders to condemn his arrest and accuse American authorities of trying to alienate their community.

Few details were available on why the Americans arrested the Sunni leader, but it appeared to be related to the ongoing Sunni-led insurgency and fears of a broader sectarian conflict starting up.

The U.S. military acknowledged it had made a "mistake" by detaining Abdul-Hamid.

"Following the interview, it was determined that he was detained by mistake and should be released," the military said. "Coalition forces regret any inconvenience and acknowledge (Abdul-Hamid's) cooperation in resolving this matter."

Iraqi authorities suggested someone had planted "lies" against him in a bid to stir up "sectarian sedition."

Abdul-Hamid himself said U.S. forces questioned him about the "current situation," an apparent reference to the wave of attacks.

Following his release, Abdul-Hamid told reporters how "U.S. special forces" blew open the doors to his home "and dragged (his sons and guards) outside like sheep."

"They forced me to lay on the ground along with my sons and guards and one of the soldiers put his foot on my neck for 20 minutes," he told Al-Jazeera TV.

Soldiers later put him into a helicopter and flew him to an unknown location for more questioning, he said. He said he did not know the whereabouts of his sons and guards.

"At the time when the Americans say they are keen on real Sunni participation, they are now arresting the head of the only Sunni party that calls for a peaceful solution and have participated in the political process," said Iraqi Islamic Party Secretary-General Ayad al-Samarei.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, expressed "surprise and discontent" over the arrest.

"This way of dealing with such a distinguished political figure is unacceptable," he said.

The country's largest Shiite political party, the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, condemned the arrest and demanded U.S. forces "be more accurate and not take action against political figures without legal justification."

The influential Association of Muslim Scholars and Sunni Endowment charity group, which have merged with Abdul-Hamid's party to form a powerful bloc to protect Sunni political interests, also condemned the arrests.

Abdul-Hamid's party had in recent weeks taken steps to become more involved in the political process after boycotting the Jan. 30 parliamentary elections, which were dominated by parties drawn from Iraq's majority Shiite population.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050530...N1I2ocA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 
Sunni leaders set demands on Iraq constitution body

Sunni leaders set demands on Iraq constitution body
By Maher Mohammed Wed Jun 8, 9:17 AM ET

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - An alliance of influential Sunni Muslims in
Iraq said on Wednesday that it would not take part in drafting a constitution unless its community was given a fair number of seats on the committee working on the project.

The Gathering of the Sunni People agreed at a conference to demand that 25 Sunni Arabs be named to the committee, on which 55 members of parliament now sit. The Shi'ite-led government has said it could expand the committee to accommodate more Sunnis -- at present only two have seats on the body.

The government has promised Sunnis a prominent role in the political process despite the fact that few of the once-dominant minority took part in the January election which produced the present parliament, meaning there are few Sunni legislators.

"The number of our representatives must be 25 so that we have fair rights with the current constitutional committee," said the alliance in a resolution agreed by delegates.

"If the National Assembly rejects this we will resort to discussions with representatives between us.

"If they stick to their position we suggest suspending our participation and the concerned parties' bear the responsibility of not giving us the chance to participate."

Any Sunni boycott of the constitutional process would deal a blow to the government's efforts to bring in more Sunnis in a strategy aimed at defusing the Sunni-led insurgency.

Although they make up around 20 percent of the population and dominated Iraq during the rule of Saddam Hussein, Sunni Arabs have been left with minimal representation in parliament because many of them boycotted the Jan. 30 elections. There are 17 Sunni Arab lawmakers in Iraq's 275-member parliament.

"The constitution cannot be drafted without the participation of all Iraqis. Any constitution written without that would not be legitimate," said the Sunni alliance.

Sunni Arabs have a potential veto under a rule written in to the U.N.-sponsored interim constitution at the insistence of the Kurdish minority concentrated in the north. The new text can be blocked if voters in three of Iraq's 18 provinces reject it in a referendum. Sunnis predominate in three provinces.

Sunni demands for a greater role come at a time of intense guerrilla violence that has killed more than 800 people since the government was formed in late April and raised fears Iraq could be moving toward civil war.

Iraqi officials have said the constitution will be ready by an Aug. 15 deadline even if Sunni Arabs are given time to choose representatives to help draft a document.

Under Iraq's political timetable, once a constitution is written it must be approved by a referendum. If it is approved, a new general election will be held by the end of the year.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050608...kRZ.3QA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 
Twenty-two Iraqi soldiers kidnapped

Twenty two Iraqi soldiers were kidnapped near the Syrian border, an Iraqi military source said as four US soldiers were killed in less than 24 hours in attacks north of the capital.

With no let-up in the targeting of the country's fledgling security forces, senior Iraqi Shiite leader Abdul Aziz al-Hakim demanded that the armed wing of his party play a greater role in hunting down insurgents, who have also singled out the country's majority Shiite community for attacks.

The soldiers, all Shiites from the south, were nabbed by armed men in Rawa, about 250 kilometres (160 miles) west of Baghdad, after they had left their base, said the military source, adding that nothing had been heard from them since.

The defence and interior ministries could not confirm the report.

Rawa is in the predominantly Sunni Arab Al-Anbar province that has seen several incidents of kidnapping and mass killing of Iraqi soldiers in the past.

In early March the bullet-riddled bodies of at least 30 members of the security forces were found on the banks of the Euphrates near Qaim, another border town in the restive province.

Both US and Iraqi officials have accused Syria of not doing enough to stem the flow of fighters through its border with Iraq.

And at another flashpoint on the Iraq-Syrian frontier, a joint Iraqi-US force pressed on with an offensive against insurgents in the northern town of Tal Afar, west of the main city of Mosul.

Four bombers were killed when their explosives-laden vehicle detonated prematurely in Tal Afar, said Captain Ahmed Amjad of the Iraqi police.

Troops have found and destroyed nine weapons caches and detained 73 suspects since the start of the operation in Tal Afar on May 26, the US military said, adding that it was part of about 30 solo Iraqi or joint anti-insurgency operations nationwide.

With the major offensive in Baghdad dubbed Operation Lightning in its third week, insurgents appear to have shifted their focus north of the capital in a familiar pattern of moving attacks from one area of the country to another whenever they come under pressure.

At least 49 Iraqis and four US soldiers have been killed since Tuesday in attacks north of the capital.

A US soldier was killed Wednesday when his patrol hit a roadside bomb near Ad-Dawr, a US military statement said.

In nearby Tikrit, ousted leader Saddam Hussein's hometown, two US soldiers were killed late Tuesday in an "indirect fire attack," on their base, a military statement said.

Leaflets signed by the shadowy Islamic Army were plastered on shop fronts and walls in Tikrit claiming responsibility.

"The knights of the Ali bin Abi Taleb Brigade fired a barrage of mortars and rockets last night at the citadel of infidels in the centre of Tikrit," said the leaflet.

Another US soldier based in Balad, also north of Baghdad, was killed in a roadside bomb Tuesday.

Other violence Wednesday included the killing of two guards of Kurdish deputy Fraidun Abdulqader as they drove in the capital's tense southern district of Dura.

In another sign of the majority Shiites' determination to cement their position in power after years of oppression under Saddam's Sunni dominated rule, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim called for greater influence over security matters for those who fought the previous regime.

In recognition of the "sacrifices and heroic positions of our brothers and brave sons from the Badr Organisation... we must give them priority in bearing administrative and government responsibilities especially in the security field", Hakim told a conference honouring Badr in Baghdad.

He leads the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a key member of the Shiite-dominated government of Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari.

Its Badr Organisation replaced the Badr Brigade which was formed by former SCIRI boss and Hakim's brother Mohammed Baqer al-Hakim in the 1980s to fight Saddam with backing and funding from Iran.

After Saddam's fall many Sunni Arabs accused Badr and other returning Shiite dissidents of leading a vendetta against them.

The tension boiled over in mid-May with the murder of 14 Sunnis. At the time, Hareth al-Dhari, the head of the Committee of Muslim Scholars, Iraq's main Sunni religious authority, openly fingered Badr as the culprit.

And in a rare incident of its kind, three Iraqis and a Dutch man of Iraqi origin are being held in the Netherlands as part of an investigation into attacks against US military vehicles in Iraq, the Dutch prosecutor's office said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2005060...KxX6GMA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 
Leaders of Iraq Back Militias, Widening Rift With Sunnis

Iraq's leaders came out in support of ethnic and sectarian militias that Sunnis fear could be used against them.​

By EDWARD WONG

BAGHDAD, Iraq, June 8 - The rift between the Iraqi government and hostile Sunni Arabs widened further on Wednesday as the country's leaders came out in support of ethnic and sectarian militias that Sunnis fear could be used against them.

Top Sunni Arab leaders also demanded that a 55-member committee that is to begin writing a new constitution add at least 25 Sunni seats with full voting powers. There was no immediate response from the Shiite-led committee, but in recent days its members have proposed adding 12 to 15 nonvoting seats for Sunni Arabs.

The announcement regarding militias was the first time the new government had publicly backed armed ethnic and sectarian groups, and it was an implicit rebuke to American officials, who have repeatedly asked that the government disband all militias in the country. The largest militias are the Kurdish pesh merga and an Iranian-trained Shiite militia that Sunni leaders have blamed for attacks against them.

The remarks were made at a morning news conference that was attended by Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, a Shiite Arab; President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd and a militia leader himself; and Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, the leader of the Shiite political party that created the Iranian-trained militia, known as the Badr Organization. The briefing was held in Mr. Hakim's headquarters to mark his militia's second anniversary in the new Iraq and to rebut recent criticisms of the Badr from Sunni leaders.

The joint appearance of Mr. Talabani and the Shiite leaders seemed to indicate that Shiite and Kurdish leaders had reached an understanding that their respective militias should continue to exist.

Iraqi officials say the militias will be placed under the nominal control of the Defense and Interior Ministries. Kurdish leaders have consistently made clear, however, that the pesh merga will actually remain under the command of the Kurdistan regional government and, for all practical purposes, will be independent of the central government.

In Washington, Sean McCormack, a State Department spokesman, said Wednesday that American officials no longer played a role in determining the policy on militias.

"I have to emphasize this is an Iraqi issue that they will decide and that they will deal with," he told reporters. "But we will continue to work closely with them in the training of Iraqi forces."

Amid the political maneuvering, the Sunni-led insurgency ground on, with the American military announcing that four soldiers had been killed in various attacks in northern Iraq on Tuesday and Wednesday. There were also sketchy and unconfirmed reports of the kidnapping of 22 Shiite soldiers in the rebellious western desert region of the country.

A car bomb exploded in a line of drivers outside a gas station in the city of Baquba, killing three people and wounding one, an Interior Ministry official said. Two bodyguards of a National Assembly member were shot dead in Baghdad, while a police officer was killed in the capital, and another was assassinated in Mosul, the official said.

The Badr Organization has recently become a target of some Sunni Arab leaders, who have blamed it for the killings of prominent Sunni clerics and others. Among the group's harshest critics is Harith al-Dhari, leader of the Muslim Scholars Association, a powerful group of Sunni clerics that says it represents 3,000 mosques.

Indeed, from the time the Badr militia entered Iraq from Iran during the American-led invasion, Sunnis have blamed its fighters for assassinations across the country, especially the killings of former Baath Party officials.

The two main Kurdish parties together have the strongest militia in the country, a force of 100,000 fighters known as the pesh merga, or "those who face death." In negotiations with the Shiites to assemble the current government, Kurdish leaders argued vehemently that the Kurds, as part of their right to broad autonomy, must be allowed to keep the pesh merga intact.

"You and the pesh merga are wanted and are important to fulfilling this sacred task, to establishing a democratic, federal and independent Iraq," Mr. Talabani said at the news conference, speaking of the Badr Organization, which numbers in the tens of thousands.

The Badr Organization has its own guarantee that it will remain intact, since the new interior minister, Bayan Jabr, is a former Badr officer.

The Badr Organization, originally called the Badr Brigade, was founded in the 1980's in Iran, where its leaders were living in exile, and it received training from the Iranian military. Mr. Hakim was appointed its leader by his older brother, Muhammad Bakr al-Hakim. When the elder Mr. Hakim was killed in a suicide car bombing in Najaf in August 2003, his brother took charge of the political party that gave birth to the Badr.

In the summer of 2003, the Badr Brigade changed its name at a time when American officials with the Coalition Provisional Authority were urging the dissolution of all militia. Its leaders claimed publicly that it had been transformed into a purely political and civil organization. But they said repeatedly in interviews that it was still armed and was active in cities across Iraq, particularly in the Shiite heartland of the south.

One of the most intractable problems for the new government is how to lessen the deep-seated feelings of disenfranchisement among the formerly ruling Sunni Arabs. The Sunnis largely boycotted the January elections and are mostly shut out of the political process. Shiite and Kurdish leaders, at the urging of the White House, are trying to bring in more Sunnis, especially into the process of writing the permanent constitution, whose first draft is due by Aug. 15.

Sunni Arab leaders asserted Wednesday that they wanted at least 25 additional seats on the committee of the National Assembly assigned to draft the constitution. There are now two Sunni Arabs on the Shiite-dominated committee.

The committee is likely to resist the demands of the Sunnis, since it now counts only 15 Kurds in its ranks. Kurds, like the Sunni Arabs, make up roughly a fifth of the Iraqi population.

Alaa Meki, an official in the Iraqi Islamic Party, a powerful Sunni group, said in an interview that the Sunni leaders were ready to submit 25 names to the committee to be accepted as "full members, not as advisers."

The International Crisis Group, a prominent conflict-resolution organization, released a study Wednesday saying the National Assembly should immediately invoke the option of a six-month delay on the draft deadline of the constitution partly to make the process more inclusive. The assembly should then lay out a detailed timetable for completing the first draft, the study said.

Joost R. Hiltermann, the report's author, said in an e-mail message that the haggling over Sunni positions on the committee "could go on for a while" and is "all the more reason to postpone, but only with a detailed timetable."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/09/i...&en=a0bcaba78e9f88ee&ei=5094&partner=homepage
 
Iraq Sunnis reject compromise on constitution body

Iraq Sunnis reject compromise on constitution body
By Omar Anwar
Fri Jun 10, 7:24 AM ET

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - The main political body for Iraq's Sunni Arab minority rejected as insufficient on Friday an offer from parliament of extra seats on the committee charged with drawing up a new constitution.

The Gathering of the Sunni People said it stuck to its demand for 25 seats, compared to an offer of 15 from the Shi'ite head of the committee, and again threatened to boycott negotiations on the charter if its demands were not met.

Sectarian wrangling is threatening parliament's chances of meeting an Aug. 15 deadline to agree a text that can be put to a referendum within two months. Without Sunni consent, however, the constitution could be blocked in the popular vote.

The Shi'ite Muslim head of the National Assembly's constitutional committee said on Thursday Sunnis would have 13 more seats in addition to their present two on a body that would be expanded to 69 members from 55. Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari, also a Shi'ite, endorsed the plan.

But Adnan al-Dulaimi, a spokesman for the Sunni umbrella group, said the Gathering stuck by the 25 Sunni lawyers and other representatives it nominated for seats on the committee this week: "We will not agree and will not concede any seat."

"If they refuse our demand we will resort to arbitration. If they insist then we will suspend our participation," he said.

Because of boycott calls and violence in Sunni areas, few of the formerly dominant 20-percent minority took part in the Jan. 30 election which created the parliament. As a result there were few Sunni legislators to join the committee.

However, the Shi'ite-led government says it is committed to ensuring the legitimacy of the new constitution by ensuring all Iraq's religious and ethnic communities have a fair say.

PRESIDENT'S POSITION

It is not clear that the precise number of seats on the committee matters a great deal as the aim is to reach a consensus rather than push through a constitution by the kind of narrow majority the Shi'ites can normally muster on their own.

Raising Sunni representation to 15 by bringing in delegates from outside parliament would give them parity with the Kurds, who represent a similar percentage of the population.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, said on Thursday he supported the Sunni demand for 25 seats. His spokesman, Kameran Qaradaghi, said on Friday that Talabani was not pushing for such a solution, but was not opposed to it.

"The president has no objection to the Sunni Arabs having 25 members. He personally agrees on that," Qaradaghi said.

Though Talabani's power is limited on what is a parliamentary matter, his comments have encouraged the Sunnis.

"If Mr. Talabani agreed, and he is the president of Iraq and represents the country, why wouldn't the others agree?" Gathering spokesman Dulaimi said.

But the row over seats on the constitutional committee could unravel Sunni Arabs' tentative engagement in politics.

Jaafari, a Shi'ite whose government's formation was met with a bloody wave of bombings in April and May, repeated on Thursday he was ready to accept political opposition. Asked about reports of tentative discussions with insurgents, he said that those who renounced violence were welcome to join the political process.

That view was echoed on Friday by a U.S. embassy spokesman, commenting on remarks by U.S. officials that contacts with Sunni leaders have been an opportunity to pass on appeals to insurgent groups to abandon the armed struggle for politics.

"We've always believed that an inclusive political process is critical for Iraq's future prosperity and we talk to Iraqis from many different groups about participating in the political process. We encourage them to engage their government," he said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050610...xZZ.3QA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 
<font face="arial black" size="6" color="#D90000">Good Intentions Gone Bad</font>
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NEWSWEEK's Baghdad bureau chief, departing after two years of war and American occupation, has a few final thoughts.
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<b>By Rod Nordland
Monday June 3, 2005
Newsweek </b>

- Two years ago I went to Iraq as an unabashed believer in toppling Saddam Hussein. I knew his regime well from previous visits; WMDs or no, ridding the world of Saddam would surely be for the best, and America's good intentions would carry the day. What went wrong? A lot, but the biggest turning point was the Abu Ghraib scandal. Since April 2004 the liberation of Iraq has become a desperate exercise in damage control. The abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib alienated a broad swath of the Iraqi public. On top of that, it didn't work. There is no evidence that all the mistreatment and humiliation saved a single American life or led to the capture of any major terrorist, despite claims by the military that the prison produced "actionable intelligence."

The most shocking thing about Abu Ghraib was not the behavior of U.S. troops, but the incompetence of their leaders. Against the conduct of the Lynndie Englands and the Charles Graners, I'll gladly set the honesty and courage of Specialist Joseph Darby, the young MP who reported the abuse. A few soldiers will always do bad things. That's why you need competent officers, who know what the men and women under their command are capable of—and make sure it doesn't happen.

Living and working in Iraq, it's hard not to succumb to despair. At last count America has pumped at least $7 billion into reconstruction projects, with little to show for it but the hostility of ordinary Iraqis, who still have an 18 percent unemployment rate. Most of the cash goes to U.S. contractors who spend much of it on personal security. Basic services like electricity, water and sewers still aren't up to prewar levels. Electricity is especially vital in a country where summer temperatures commonly reach 125 degrees Fahrenheit. Yet only 15 percent of Iraqis have reliable electrical service. In the capital, where it counts most, it's only 4 percent.

The most powerful army in human history can't even protect a two-mile stretch of road. The Airport Highway connects both the international airport and Baghdad's main American military base, Camp Victory, to the city center. At night U.S. troops secure the road for the use of dignitaries; they close it to traffic and shoot at any unauthorized vehicles. More troops and more helicopters could help make the whole country safer. Instead the Pentagon has been drawing down the number of helicopters. And America never deployed nearly enough soldiers. They couldn't stop the orgy of looting that followed Saddam's fall. Now their primary mission is self-defense at any cost—which only deepens Iraqis' resentment.

The four-square-mile Green Zone, the one place in Baghdad where foreigners are reasonably safe, could be a showcase of American values and abilities. Instead the American enclave is a trash-strewn wasteland of Mad Max-style fortifications. The traffic lights don't work because no one has bothered to fix them. The garbage rarely gets collected. Some of the worst ambassadors in U.S. history are the GIs at the Green Zone's checkpoints. They've repeatedly punched Iraqi ministers, accidentally shot at visiting dignitaries and behave (even on good days) with all the courtesy of nightclub bouncers—to Americans and Iraqis alike. Not that U.S. soldiers in Iraq have much to smile about. They're overworked, much ignored on the home front and widely despised in Iraq, with little to look forward to but the distant end of their tours—and in most cases, another tour soon to follow. Many are reservists who, when they get home, often face the wreckage of careers and family.

I can't say how it will end. Iraq now has an elected government, popular at least among Shiites and Kurds, who give it strong approval ratings. There's even some hope that the Sunni minority will join the constitutional process. Iraqi security forces continue to get better trained and equipped. But Iraqis have such a long way to go, and there are so many ways for things to get even worse. I'm not one of those who think America should pull out immediately. There's no real choice but to stay, probably for many years to come. The question isn't "When will America pull out?"; it's "How bad a mess can we afford to leave behind?" All I can say is this: last one out, please turn on the lights.

© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.

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Sunnis Reach Accord With Shiites on Makeup of Charter Panel

By JOHN F. BURNS
and TERENCE NEILAN

BAGHDAD, Iraq, June 16 - Sunni Arabs reached agreement today with the major Shiite alliance over increased Sunni representation on the committee that will draft the Iraqi constitution.

The agreement represented a significant development in the weeks-long political deadlock between the Sunnis and the 55-member committee, and it came after considerable pressure from the United States and the European Union for Iraqis to reach a solution.

It also signaled a willingness by the Sunnis, most of whom who refused to take part in the Iraqi elections on Jan. 31, to become more involved in the political process.

Negotiators were jubilant. "I think today everyone is happy," said Bahaa al-Aaraji, a senior Shiite member on the committee and one of those who negotiated the deal. "Everything is good now. We agreed."

The pact was announced as more violence hit Baghdad, with at least six members of the Iraqi security forces killed in a suicide car bombing, and as the American military said that five marines and a sailor were killed on Wednesday in western Iraq, bringing that day's death toll among troops and civilians to 58.

The American military, meanwhile, said today that coalition forces had captured the leader of Al Qaeda in the Mosul region, in northern Iraq, on Tuesday. He was described as the most trusted operations agent in all of Iraq of the terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

Ahmad Rushdi, a senior member of the Islamic Party, a major Sunni group, said agreement on the constitutional committee had been reached with the United Iraqi Alliance, made up of the leading Shiite parties, which holds 48 percent of seats in the National Assembly.

Mr. Rushdi said an additional 15 Sunnis would be appointed to the committee and 10 Sunnis would act as consultants. Before today's agreement, the Shiite alliance had a 28-member majority on the panel and there were only two Sunni Arabs, both from parties that have shown little sign of drawing broad support in the Sunni Arab population.

In renewed violence today, a suicide car bomber in a BMW exploded his vehicle as a convoy of Iraqi security forces was passing in western Baghdad, killing at least six and wounding 27, an Interior Ministry official said.

Some 35 miles northeast of the capital, in Baquba, a roadside bomb killed three people, including two children, and wounded two others, the official said.

Also today, a suicide bomber drove a Volkswagen into an Iraqi Army convoy at the entrance of an oil company in Kirkuk, according to the head of the local police station, Maj. Taha Khudhir. Four soldiers were seriously wounded. Four civilians, including a 6-year-old boy who was selling cigarettes near the scene of the attack, were also wounded.

The death toll for Wednesday went up today when the American military said that five marines were killed near the insurgent stronghold of Ramadi; last week, five marines died just outside the same western Iraq city in a similar blast.

A sailor assigned to the marines' expeditionary force also died in Ramadi on Wednesday, the military said today, as American forces come under increasing insurgent attacks.

At least 1,705 members of the American military have died since the invasion of Iraq in 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

The marines were killed after the bomb exploded as their vehicle passed by, the military said. The sailor died after being hit by gunfire.

Amid the violence, Iraqi troops raided a house in Baghdad on Wednesday and rescued a 63-year-old Australian hostage, Douglas Wood, from nearly seven weeks of insurgent captivity. The raid, which also freed an Iraqi hostage, was a rare case of military action successfully ending one of the scores of hostage-takings that have been a major insurgent tactic in Iraq.

But the freeing of the hostages was accompanied by the deaths of 24 Iraqi soldiers and policemen in two suicide bombings in Baghdad and Khalis, a city 40 miles northeast of the capital. A mortar attack that struck outside a crowded restaurant in the southern Baghdad district of Beyaa at dinnertime killed five Iraqi civilians, according to the Interior Ministry, and the local police said another mortar blast, in the northern city of Tal Afar, killed seven civilians.

Two hours after the hostages were freed, a suicide bomber wearing an Iraqi Army uniform detonated a bomb in a canteen at an Iraqi Army base at Khalis, a market town between the Tigris and Diyala rivers. A police commander, Lt. Col. Mehdi al-Ubaidi, said the blast killed 23 soldiers and wounded 28 others.

Survivors said the attacker had waited until the canteen filled up for lunch before he set off his bomb.

The canteen attack was the second occasion in five days when a bomber wearing an Iraqi uniform penetrated security at an Iraqi base. In Baghdad on Saturday, a former member of the Wolf Brigade, an elite Iraqi police commando unit, detonated a body-belt bomb at the brigade's headquarters, killing four policemen. In recent months, insurgents have intensified their attacks on Iraqi military units, whose buildup is crucial to plans for an eventual drawdown of the 140,000 American troops stationed here.

Later on Wednesday, in an attack in the southern Baghdad district of Zafaraniya, a Mercedes sedan loaded with explosives was driven into a police patrol stopped at an intersection, incinerating three of the blue-and-white Nissan police cars that have been provided as part of the $11.1 billion American program to rebuild Iraqi security forces. An Interior Ministry official said four people had died, including a policeman, and that 17 people were injured, 5 of them policemen.

Two marines were killed Tuesday by roadside bombs during what the American military, in statements on the deaths on Wednesday, described as combat operations near Falluja and Rutba in western Iraq. Another command statement said two Bulgarian soldiers serving with the coalition forces died Tuesday near the southern city of Diwaniya when their Russian-made armored personnel carrier slid into a canal.

The rescued Australian hostage, Mr. Wood, is a longtime resident of Alamo, Calif., who was seized on April 30 while working as a contractor with Iraqi forces in Baghdad. An Australian Foreign Ministry official, Nicholas Warner, told a news conference in Baghdad that Mr. Wood had been taken to an American military hospital where he was "resting comfortably." There was no word on the condition of the freed Iraqi hostage, Rasool al-Tai'ee, a contractor for the Iraqi forces who was seized separately from Mr. Wood last month.

An Iraqi officer, Lt. Gen. Naseer al-Abadi, said Mr. Wood was found blindfolded, tied to a bed and covered by a blanket when an Iraqi Army unit, acting on a tip, raided a house in the predominantly Sunni Arab neighborhood of Al Adel in west Baghdad, an area known as a rebel stronghold. The general said two insurgents arrested in the midmorning raid tried to deter the Iraqi soldiers from looking beneath the blanket by saying that the man lying there was their father, and that he was sick.

Over the past 18 months, more than 150 foreigners have been kidnapped by insurgents, or by criminal gangs working in tandem with the rebels. Of those, about 80 have been killed, many of them from Arab countries, and about 40, mostly from Arab nations, remain missing.

Before Wednesday, the American command had disclosed only one case in which military action played a decisive role in a hostage release. That case involved an American truck driver who escaped from captivity in a remote area north of Baghdad last year and flagged down a passing American military unit.

In the cases of the recent hostage releases, involving French and Italian journalists and aid workers, the governments in Paris and Rome opposed any military action. Instead, they negotiated independently with the hostage-takers.

The release of Mr. Wood provided an opportunity for Australian and American officials to praise Iraqi troops, who have been heavily criticized in recent weeks by some American units for their poor training and discipline and lack of commitment in combat conditions.

John F. Burns and Ali Adeeb, an Iraqi employee of The New York Times, reported from Baghdad for this article, and Terence Neilan from New York. An Iraqi employee of The Times, whose name is being withheld for security reasons, contributed reporting from Kirkuk.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/16/i...&en=2363369e8a4cbec3&ei=5094&partner=homepage
 
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Former Iraq <s>Prime</s> Puppet Minister Iyad Allawi Says
"This is the Start of Civil War"</font>

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<b>Allawi: "This is the Start of Civil War"
Hala Jaber, Amman</b>

July 10th 2005

:IRAQ’S former interim prime minister Iyad Allawi has warned that his country is facing civil war and has predicted dire consequences for Europe and America as well as the Middle East if the crisis is not resolved.

“The problem is that the Americans have no vision and no clear policy on how to go about in Iraq,” said Allawi, a long-time ally of Washington.

In an interview with The Sunday Times last week as he visited Amman, the Jordanian capital, he said: “The policy should be of building national unity in Iraq. Without this we will most certainly slip into a civil war. We are practically in stage one of a civil war as we speak.”

Allawi, a secular Shi’ite, said that Iraq had collapsed as a state and needed to be rebuilt. The only way forward, he said, was through “national unity, the building of institutions, the economy and a firm but peaceful foreign relation policy”. Unless these criteria were satisfied, “the country will deteriorate”.

Allawi’s concern comes amid signs of growing violence between Shi’ites, who make up 60% of Iraq’s estimated 26m people, and the Sunni minority who dominated the upper reaches of the civilian bureaucracy and officer corps under Saddam Hussein.

The Shi’ites, who endured decades of oppression, are threatening to purge members of Saddam’s former Ba’ath party from the army and the intelligence services, a move that would provoke fierce retaliation from the Sunnis.

Since the execution-style killings of 34 men whose bound and blindfolded bodies were found in three predominantly Shi’ite areas of Baghdad in May, other tit-for-tat murders have followed, with clerics among the targets.

Tension has increased in the past two weeks following the return of Abu Musab al- Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born head of Al-Qaeda in Iraq. Zarqawi left the country in May to seek medical treatment for a chest wound suffered in an American airstrike, but has now recovered sufficiently to resume his activities.

Earlier this month he claimed that his supporters had killed Sheikh Kamaleddin al-Ghuraifi, a senior aide to Iraq’s most influential Shi’ite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.

Zarqawi has now released an audiotape in which he announces the formation of a new militant unit, the Omar Corps. Its avowed aim is to “eradicate” the Badr brigade, the armed wing of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, the country’s largest Shi’ite political party, which has targeted Sunnis.

Allawi, who became head of the interim government council created after the American-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, said it was imperative that the security services and military be rebuilt. He has been a staunch critic of the policy followed by Paul Bremer, the American former head of the Coalition Provisional Authority, of removing former Ba’athists from positions of power and disbanding Saddam’s army without putting anything else in place.

Allawi said that he had discussed the urgency of rebuilding Iraq’s military with President George W Bush and Donald Rumsfeld, the defence secretary, last year. “Bush earmarked $5.7 billion (£3.2 billion) . . . but I did not receive the money,” Allawi said.

His experience as prime minister had taught him that “force alone will not solve the problems in Iraq”. It needed to be combined with dialogue and money to ensure stability.

However, Allawi insisted the Americans’ presence in Iraq was still required and rejected suggestions that a schedule should be drawn up for their withdrawal. “I cannot see withdrawal based on timing, but based on conditions,” he said. These would be satisfied only once Iraq “develops the capability to deal with threats”.

During his term Allawi lost the support of Iraq’s secular middle class through failing to fulfil his promise of restoring security and because of alleged corruption.

However, he is preparing for a comeback in elections scheduled for December. His supporters believe he will be helped in part by the increasing impact of Iraqi gunmen and suicide bombers since Ibrahim Jaafari became prime minister in April.

More than 1,400 people have since been killed, and many Iraqis who regarded Allawi as a ruthless leader now speak wistfully of the relative calm enjoyed under his rule.

Allawi is in intense negotiations to create a new multi-ethnic secular coalition before the general election.

“If we don’t build a state we will lose,” Allawi warned. “Not just as Iraq, but the region as a whole and Europe should say goodbye to stability and so should the United States. Iraq will become a breeding ground for terrorists.

“My philosophy in fighting is to isolate the hardcore Islamists. If you isolate them, it will become very easy to smash them or bring them to justice.”


US Marines and Iraqi soldiers have seized 22 suspected militants in Operation Scimitar, a fourth counter-insurgency sweep of the Euphrates valley in less than a month, the American military said yesterday.


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFriendly/0,,1-524-1687910,00.html

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