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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Bush rules out any delay in bogus Iraqi election
By Peter Symonds
6 December 2004
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Before the Iraqi elections planned for January 30 get underway,
it is clear that the exercise has nothing to do with bringing
democracy to the Iraqi people.
Even the date of the poll is being determined in Washington.
Last Thursday, speaking to reporters at the White House, US President
Bush bluntly dismissed calls from inside Iraq for the election
to be delayed. Its time for the Iraqi citizens to
go to the polls, he declared.
Its one of those moments in history where a lot
of people will be amazed that a society has been transformed so
quickly from one of tyranny and torture and mass graves to one
in which people are actually allowed to express themselves at
the ballot, he added.
Of course, none of the assembled media pointed to the absurdity
of Bushs comments. The tyranny, torture and mass graves
that have been part and parcel of the US occupation of Iraq are
precisely what is fuelling ongoing armed resistance to the American
military presence. The election date was set in the wake of the
latest US atrocitythe levelling of the city of Fallujah
and the indiscriminate slaughter of thousands of resistance fighters
and civilians.
As far as the White House is concerned, the essential preparation
for the election is an increase by 12,000 in US troop strength
to bolster American military operations to suppress armed opposition
and intimidate an overwhelmingly hostile population. The Iraqi
people will only be able to express themselves at
a ballot held under US military occupation and for parties and
candidates vetted and monitored by US officials.
In three of the countrys 18 provinces, fighting has been
so intense that preparations for the January 30 poll have not
begun. In the northern city of Mosul, voter registration lists
and other election material were destroyed in mid-November when
insurgents mounted a series of concerted attacks and took over
police stations and key government buildings.
US ambassador John Negroponte tried to reassure the media last
week that security conditions would be sufficient and adequate
for the election to take place. Over the past three days, however,
more than 80 people have died in a wave of attacks on US forces
and Iraqi government police and troops. In the deadliest incident
on Saturday, a car packed with explosives rammed a mini-bus carrying
Kurdish militia who were heading to Mosul to reinforce government
forces. At least 18 were killed.
In an interview published in a Dutch newspaper on Saturday,
UN special envoy to Iraq Lakhdar Brahimi bluntly warned: It
is a mess in Iraq. Asked if it would be possible to hold
elections, he declared: If the circumstances stay as they
are, I dont think so. He called on the international
community and the US to help clean up this mess. If
you let it deteriorate, the situation will become even more dangerous.
Brahimis comments reflect concerns, particularly in European
ruling circles, that the situation in Iraq is rapidly spiralling
out of control. Far from stabilising the country, an election
held under these circumstances will be widely viewed as illegitimate
both inside and outside Iraq.
Opposition to the election is most evident among the countrys
Sunni minority, which constitutes about 20 percent of the population.
Over the weekend, a meeting of mainly Sunni leaders, representing
40 parties, gathered under the slogan Flawed Elections,
Disputed Results to call for the election to be delayed.
Tawfik al Yassri, leader of Iraqi National Coalition party, told
the media: I warn the two sides that the situation is very
serious. If the poll is seen as illegitimate, he said, It
will be the first seed of civil war.
A number of parties, including the Association of Muslim Scholars,
the Iraqi Turkomen Movement and the Christian Democratic Party,
have already gone one step further and called for a boycott of
the poll.
Negroponte contemptuously dismissed threats of a boycott last
week, warning that the parties would simply be left out in the
cold. Do they really want to opt out of an election process
that is going to pick a national assembly that drafts the constitution
and shapes the political future of their country? he asked
in comments to the Chicago Tribune. I think once
they realise the elections are going forward as planned, theyll
have to deal with that reality.
The US is nevertheless pulling out all stops to undermine any
boycott. The US-installed figureheadsinterim prime minister
Ayad Allawi and president Ghazi al-Yawarhave both issued
statements backing the elections and the current polling date.
Allawi made a visit to Jordan last week in an effort to convince
Iraqi exiles to lend their support to the election.
Washington is resting on the support of prominent Shiite groups
headed by Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, who has been pushing for
direct elections since the beginning of the year. Sistani and
other Shiite leaders calculate that they can win the election
by making a sectarian appeal to the countrys Shiite majority,
who constitute about 60 percent of the population. With a majority
in the national assembly, they are seeking to dominate the process
of drawing up a constitution, in preparation for fresh elections
at the end of next year.
Sistani has rejected calls for a postponement of the polls.
His aides are prominent in drawing up a joint Shiite ticket to
contest the election. The main parties involved in the alliance
include the Islamic Dawa party and the Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), both of which actively supported
the US invasion of Iraq. Representatives of rebel Shiite cleric
Moqtada al-Sadr, whose militia fought pitched battles with US
forces in Najaf and the Baghdad suburb of Sadr City, are also
taking part.
Washington can draw little comfort from the fact that this
alliance appears set to dominate the election. Sistani and his
allies are contesting the poll, and thereby lending it much-needed
legitimacy. At the same time, they are compelled to appeal to
the sentiments of voters who overwhelmingly want the US to leave
the country. If we dont have elections or an elected
government then the Americans will stay and our problems will
continue, one Shiite leader Nadeem al-Jabbery argued.
According to an Iraqi Gallup poll cited in Time magazine,
some 80 percent of respondents wanted American forces out of the
country after the January 30 election. The polling was done before
the brutal US crackdown in Fallujah, which has inflamed Iraqi
opposition to the occupation even further.
Many ordinary Iraqis regard the election with contempt. Talking
about a fair and a successful election is an improbable matter,
a Baghdad professor declared on the Occupation Watch web
site. How can we say it is a legitimate election while the
occupation forces are in our country? For sure these forces will
drive the election on their behalf. How are we to imagine a real
election while our towns are being bombarded and civilians are
dying every day?
The mechanics of the election are barely underway. Voter registration
has been carried out via forms sent out through the countrys
food rationing systema method that is wide open to rorting.
There are just a handful of international officials20 UN
staff and 15 from Jordanin the country to help prepare the
poll. The electoral officials required to man polling booths across
the country are yet to be hired, let alone trained.
I just cant see how we can hold these elections,
an international consultant told the Christian Science Monitor.
We need at least 40,000 peoplenine thousand polling
stations and four or five people per station. And I just dont
see that happening. The electoral commission just doesnt
have the manpower.
The election planned for January 30 is a sham. By comparison,
the recent election in the Ukraine was a model of democratic process
and propriety. Yet, the Bush administration, which has denounced
the Ukrainian result, will no doubt declare the Iraq poll to be
a great victory for democracy. In both instances, the rhetoric
is determined by political expediency and US economic and strategic
interests.
See Also:
Egyptian ministerial conference:
Middle East leaders rubberstamp US occupation of Iraq
[27 November 2004]
Iraqi elections announced
amid mass repression
[22 November 2004]
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