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Analysis : Middle
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After the Iraq election: Washington steps in to shape the
next government
By James Cogan
21 December 2005
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The first results for the December 15 election in occupied
Iraq indicate that the largest block of the 275 seats in the next
parliament will be once again held by the Shiite fundamentalist
United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), with most of the remainder held by
other explicitly sectarian formationsthe Kurdish Alliance
(KA) and coalitions of Sunni Arab parties.
Based on the partial count released on December 19, the UIA
will win 120 to 130 seats on the basis of large votes from Iraqs
majority Shiite Muslim population. The Kurdish bloc is tipped
to win 45 or more seats. In the three northern, predominantly
Kurdish provinces, the KA won over 80 percent of the vote.
The Iraqi Accordance Front, a coalition centred on the Iraqi
Islamic Party, won 19 percent of the vote in Baghdad and over
50 percent in central provinces with a majority Sunni population.
The front is tacitly supported by the Association of Muslim Scholars
(AMS), an umbrella organisation of several thousand Sunni clerics.
A secular Sunni coalition made up of sympathisers of Saddam Husseins
Baath Party gained a smaller vote. Overall, the Sunni parties
may win up to 50 seats.
Some 20 seats appear to have been won by an array of smaller
parties, including a Kurdish Islamic movement, regional and tribal-based
groups, ethnic Turkomen organisations and Christian associations.
The parties most associated with the US invasion of Iraq were
repudiated by the Iraqi people. Despite blanket media promotion,
the Iraqi National List of Iyad Allawi secured just 12 to 14 percent
of the vote and is expected to win only about 30 seats. Allawi,
a longtime CIA asset, was installed as the first interim prime
minister of Iraq in June 2004. Among masses of Iraqis, he is viewed
as an American-backed thug who endorsed the ensuing US military
assaults on the Shiite city of Najaf and the Sunni city of Fallujah.
The other US favourite, the Iraqi National Congress (INC) of
Ahmed Chalabi, appears to have won less than one percent of the
vote and will hold few if any seats. Chalabi has been on Washingtons
payroll since the first Gulf War in 1990-1991. In 2004, he was
pushed aside when he insisted on continuing a Baathist purge when
the US military was seeking to recruit members of the previous
regime. While he returned to favour in Washington later that year,
he is despised by the Iraqi people. On December 18, Newsday
referred to Chalabi as the dark-horse candidate for
prime minister, but added that many Iraqis regard him as
a carpetbagger.
The composition of the next Iraqi government will not, however,
be primarily determined by the votes that were cast on December
15. Rather, the regime in Baghdad will be decided by dealing-making
and US arm-twisting to ensure that its leading figures implement
Washingtons demands. Above all, US plans involve opening
up the Iraqi oil industry to foreign investors, crushing the anti-occupation
insurgency and establishing permanent American military bases
to extend US influence more broadly in the Middle East.
The clearest indication that the Bush administration intends
to firmly put its stamp on the next puppet regime was the unannounced
arrival of Vice President Dick Cheney in Iraq on December 18,
just days after the election. Before even informing Iraqi Prime
Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari that he was in the country, Cheney
held hour-long talks with American ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad
and senior military commanders. Jaafari and current Iraqi president,
Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani, were then summoned to the US embassy
for a meeting with Cheney.
During the campaign, the Bush administration made little attempt
to hide its desire to substantially weaken the influence of the
UIA. While the UIA has loyally collaborated with the US occupation,
one of its main components, the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), has close ties with the Iranian regime.
Under conditions where Washington is steadily escalating tensions
with Tehran, SCIRI is not considered a reliable enough ally in
what may involve military action against Iran.
Over the past several months, Washington has taken steps to
undermine the UIA and SCIRI in particular. Above all, the US-led
occupation forces have sought the endorsement of the election
by the Sunni Arab elite that dominated under the former Baathist
regime.
Sunnis make up as much as 20 percent of the population and
provide the main popular backing for the armed anti-US resistance.
They overwhelmingly boycotted the January 30 vote, assisting the
Shiite UIA to win an outright majority in the parliament. This
time the Sunni turnout pushed the UIA share to well below 50 percent.
To facilitate this, the US military went as far as withdrawing
troops from the major Sunni city of Ramadi allowing insurgents
to organise the ballot. With masked guerillas guarding polling
stations, turnout in the city of 300,000 was estimated at 80 percent.
In the lead-up to the election, the US military also raided
Iraqi interior ministry detention centres in Baghdad where predominantly
Sunni prisoners were being tortured by members of SCIRIs
Badr Organisation militia. Interior Minister Bayan Jabr is a SCIRI
and Badr Organisation leader. The raids were used by Allawi in
particular to try to tarnish SCIRI in the eyes of the Shiite population
and attract support from Sunnis.
On the day of the election, Khalilzad pointedly declared that
the next head of the securities ministry should be trusted
by all communities and not come from elements of the population
that have militiasan implicit call for the removal
of Jabr and other SCIRI figures. He accused Iran of being a predatory
state, seeking to interfere in Iraqi internal affairs,
dovetailing with accusations by Sunni politicians that SCIRI is
a fifth column for Tehran. Spelling out Washingtons agenda,
Khalilzad declared: Since no single party will have a majority
there will be a need for a very broad-based coalition.
The US machinations have not brought about the desired result,
however. Sunnis overwhelmingly used their vote to express opposition
to the foreign military presence, not to support Allawi. A teacher
in Baqubah told the Los Angeles Times: The most important
issue for me is to get the occupation out. A Sunni voter
in the town of Al Zubbiah told the BBC: Were voting
for the foreign troops to go home. A grocer interviewed
by Associated Press declared: Liberation is the most important
thing for all Iraqis. I dont care if we die of thirst and
hunger, as long as the Americans leave.
In the predominantly Shiite-populated southern provinces of
Iraq, despite growing resentment over the catastrophic living
conditions that face millions of people, the UIA won 70 to 95
percent of the vote. Nationally, the Shiite list has won well
over 40 percent of the total. In Baghdadthe most populous
provincethe coalition won 1.4 million votes or 59 percent,
and at least 30 seats of the 59 seats up for election.
This result in part stems from the participation of the Sadrist
movement headed by cleric Moqtada al-Sadr in the UIA. In 2004,
the Sadrists led an armed uprising among Shiites against the American
military. This year the Sadrist leaders have used their support
among poor working class Shiites to try to lever themselves into
positions of power in the next regime. The Sadrists mobilised
a large turnout for the UIA in the working class suburbs of Baghdad
and other cities that are effectively under the control of Sadrs
Mahdi Army militia and Sadrist-dominated police.
Representatives of the Sunni parties and Allawis list,
which appealed to secular Sunnis and Shiites, have accused the
UIA-dominated security forces and Shiite militias of electoral
fraud and voter intimidation. They have alleged that pro-UIA police
in Basra and other southern cities disrupted the campaigning of
other parties and threatened voters as they approached polling
stations. More than 1,000 complaints have been filed with the
electoral commission for investigation.
In Baghdad, the Sunni parties are alleging outright ballot
stuffing to give the UIA a majority. Adnan al-Dulaimi, the head
of the Iraqi Accordance Front, warned on December 20: We
will demand that the elections be held again in Baghdad. If this
demand is not met, then we will resort to other measures.
Whatever the truth of the particular allegations, in the communally
charged atmosphere of the campaign, there was no doubt widespread
intimidation and fraud in many parts of the country.
Deeper quagmire for occupation
The election outcome portends an even deeper quagmire for the
US-led occupation. The Bush administration has consciously stoked
up ethnic divisions since the March 2003 invasion to divert the
immense social tensions in a communalist direction. The next parliament,
even more than the previous one, will be made up of three mutually
antagonistic sectarian blocs.
With close to half of the seats, the UIA will effectively be
the kingmaker. Under the US-vetted constitution, next president
and two vice-presidents, who comprise the presidential council
responsible for nominating the prime minister, must be elected
by a two-thirds parliamentary vote. As the dominant bloc, the
UIA will be in a position to demand that one of its leaders takes
the key post.
The election result also ensures that the controversial constitution
drawn up by Khalilzad, the Kurdish parties and the Shiite bloc,
and adopted by referendum on October 15, cannot be amended without
the UIAs agreement. Any amendments require two-thirds support
in the parliament.
The constitution undermines the central Iraqi state by permitting
the establishment of regional governments with substantial powers
over Iraqs oil and gas and the right to establish their
own internal security forces. In northern Iraq, the Kurdish elite
is pushing to include the oil-rich province of Tamin and the city
of Kirkuk in its de-facto state in northern Iraq. In the south,
SCIRI advocates a regional state that encompasses nine predominantly
Shiite provinces, with close to half the countrys population
and as much as 60 percent of its oil and gas.
The Sunni Arab elite called for a high Sunni turnout hoping
to introduce significant changes to the constitution to strengthen
the central government. Instead, Sunnis face economic marginalisation
as well as ongoing repression by the US military and a Shiite-dominated
regime in Baghdad. After a brief lull during the election, the
scale of insurgent attacks against American and government targets
has begun to climb.
Whatever the final election outcome, what is certain is that
US ambassador Khalilzad, who has played a key role in assembling
the US puppet state in Afghanistan, has been tasked by Cheney
with fashioning the next government to meet Washingtons
requirements. The gulf between the new regime and the sentiments
of masses ordinary Iraqis will only fuel the existing opposition
and armed resistance to the occupation and broaden its dimensions.
See Also:
US ambassador "will remain the
critical behind-the-scenes power," says New York Times
Iraqi election to rubber-stamp continued US occupation
[16 December 2005]
Iraq elections: a democratic façade
for a US puppet state
[14 December 2005]
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