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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraq election sets stage for escalating political turmoil
By James Cogan
5 February 2005
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The Iraq election on January 30 has resolved none of the political
dilemmas facing the US occupation and created a series of new
ones.
The election has been presented as a blow to the anti-occupation
insurgency. Before the results are even counted, however, it is
clear that in the Sunni Muslim areas of central Iraq where the
resistance is most active, millions of Iraqis followed the calls
for a boycott of the ballot.
In the northern city of Mosul, Iraqs third largest and
the scene of heavy fighting over the past three months, just 50,000
people out of 500,000 eligible voters participated. The turnout
was primarily in Kurdish suburbs. An almost total abstention took
place in Fallujah, which was largely destroyed by the US military
in November at the cost of an estimated 6,000 Iraqi lives. Only
4,000 to 5,000 voted in Tikrit, while just hundreds are believed
to have voted in cities such as Ramadi and Samarra. Low turnouts
have also been reported from Sunni towns to the south of Baghdad
and some of the main Sunni suburbs of the capital. While no exact
estimate has been made, it is believed that just 10 percent of
Iraqs Sunni population cast a vote.
There is little doubt that a significant number of Iraqis did
not vote in the Sunni areas due to fear of insurgent attacks on
polling stations or reprisals by guerilla groups. The dominant
factor though, was opposition to the occupation. The Sunni population
has suffered immensely since the US invasion in March 2003. Tens
of thousands have been killed, maimed, abused or stripped of their
employment and social position. The main Sunni religious and political
organisations called for the boycott on the grounds no genuinely
democratic vote can take place under an occupation that is seeing
the Sunni regions of the country endure daily repression at the
hands of the American military.
The Association of Muslim Scholars, the organisation of some
3,000 Sunni clerics which led the boycott agitation, has already
issued a statement declaring the election illegitimate. The statement
read: These elections lack legitimacy because a large segment
of different sects, parties and currents with their influence
in Iraq boycotted. This necessarily means that the coming National
Assembly and the government that will emerge from it will not
possess the legitimacy to enable them to draft the coming constitution.
As if to answer the assertions that the election would lessen
the intensity of guerilla actions against the occupation, a wave
of attacks has taken place on US troops and Iraqi forces in the
past four days.
After the initial inflated claims regarding voter turnoutsuch
as Fox News reports of 90 percentobservers are now
estimating that some eight million people, or 57 percent of eligible
voters, participated across Iraq. The largest turnouts were among
Shiite and Kurdish Iraqis.
In the three predominantly Kurdish provinces of northern Iraq,
an estimated 2.1 million people votedoverwhelmingly for
the coalition of Kurdish bourgeois parties contesting the ballot
as the Kurdish Alliance.
Across Iraqs south, large numbers of Shiites turned out.
In major Shiite centres such as Basra, Nasiriyah, Karbala and
Najaf, as well as Shia areas of Baghdad, long queues developed
at polling stations. In some areas, so many voted that polling
stations ran out of ballot papers. Iraqs interim president
Ghazi al-Yawar reported on February 2 that tens of thousands
were unable to cast their votes because of the lack of ballots
in Basra, Baghdad and Najaf.
As many as 60 percent of Iraqis are classified as adherents
of the Shia branch of Islam. The majority of Shiite votes flowed
to the Unified Iraqi Alliance (UIA) or what was popularly known
as the Shia Lista coalition based around the largest sectarian
Shiite fundamentalist parties, the pro-Iranian Supreme Council
for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and the Dawa
Party, as well as the previously US-sponsored Iraqi National Congress
(INC) led by Ahmed Chalabi. The UIA was supported by the most
senior Shiite cleric in Iraq, Ali al-Sistani, who issued a fatwa
or edict making it a religious duty for Shiites to participate
in the ballot. The clerics image was used in most of the
Lists election posters and propaganda.
According to figures released on Friday from 10 predominantly
Shiite-populated southern provinces, the UIA had won at least
two-thirds of total votes counted. Once national totals are tallied,
it is predicted to win at least 45 to 50 percent of the seats
in the 275-member Transitional Assembly. The Kurdish parties may
end up with 25 percent of the seats. The Iraqi List coalition
headed by US-installed interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, and
the Peoples Union coalition headed by the Iraqi Communist Party
(ICP), are both registering around 10 percent support in early
counting.
The raw voting numbers, however, explain nothing about the
sentiments of the Shiite and Kurdish masses and why they, in contrast
to the Sunni population, took part in the election.
For a range of historical factors, the majority of contemporary
Iraqs working class and rural poor are Shiite or Kurdish.
Their aspirations for social equality and democratic, national
and religious rights had an explicitly left wing and secular character.
For decades following the overthrow of the British and US-backed
monarchy, millions of Iraqi workers, whether Shiite, Sunni or
Kurdish, gave their political allegiances to the Stalinist Communist
Party, wrongly believing it to be a genuine socialist and anti-imperialist
organisation. Shia fundamentalism and Kurdish nationalism only
began to developed significant support after the bloody Baathist
suppression of the working class in 1978. The bloodbath was directly
facilitated by the refusal of the ICP to conduct an open struggle
against the regime, which it had promoted as representing the
progressive wing of the ruling elite.
The voting patterns last Sunday can only be understood in the
context of this complex history. The election was not an endorsement
of the US invasion and occupation. It was above all a reflection
of the confused but deeply-held aspirations of ordinary Iraqis
for lasting social change and an end to decades of political repression.
The parties making up the Shia List, along with Sistani, promoted
the illusion that the election would be the means both for bringing
a quick end to the American military presence in Iraq and for
creating a government that will be attentive to the outstanding
social needs of the millions of Shiite working class and rural
poor.
Similarly, the Kurdish bourgeois parties campaigned on the
basis that the reorganisation of Iraq under the US occupation
will lead to an autonomous or fully independent Kurdish state
in northern Iraq that would ensure the Kurds never again suffer
persecution. Moreover, by establishing control of Iraqs
northern oilfields around the city of Kirkuk, it would deliver
improved living standards.
Conflicts inevitable
None of these promises can or will be delivered. The illegal
invasion in 2003 was not launched by the Bush administration to
end the oppression of Iraqi Shiites, Kurds or anyone else. The
objectives of the war were and remain to transform the country
into a US client state in the Middle East and turn over its energy
resources to US-based oil conglomerates. To achieve its ends Washington
is prepared to offer minor concessions to factions of the Iraqi
ruling class, but it will not accept any demands that conflict
with its geopolitical and economic ambitions in the region.
The electoral success of the Shiite and Kurdish parties has
therefore placed them on a collision course both with US imperialism
and with the very layers who voted for them. They will only retain
US backing to the extent they carry out Washingtons dictates,
and in doing so, will be increasingly exposed in the eyes of those
who voted for them.
The Kurdish parties already face discontent over the issue
of Kurdish control of Kirkuk and the surrounding oilfields. Washington
at this point is insisting the Kurds accept that northern Iraq
can never be anything more than an autonomous zone, with no substantial
economic resources. Turkey has implicitly threatened military
intervention into Iraq to prevent any move toward an independent
and oil-rich Kurdish state, fearing it would fuel the separatist
sentiment among the countrys own substantial Kurdish minority.
A Turkish-Kurdish conflict would plunge the region into protracted
turmoil and seriously undermine US interests.
By encouraging Kurdish separatist sentiment in Iraq over the
past 15 years, however, the US has let loose forces it cannot
easily control. A Kurdish tribal leader, for example, told the
Los Angeles Times this week: Talabani and Barzani
[the main Kurdish leaders] must not give up Kirkuk. If they do,
the people will split with them. We wont accept that. We
want it to be resolved peacefully, but if not, weve already
lost a lot of lives over Kirkuk and were willing to lose
a lot more. The oil of Kirkuk will sustain us and we will not
abandon it.
The Kurdish nationalist poet Sherko Bekas told the Los Angeles
Times: Im disappointed in US policy toward the
Kurds. The US is not reading Iraq accurately. Agitation
for a separate state is intensifying in northern Iraq, with demands
for a referendum.
Tensions are also already apparent between the Shiite masses
and the Shia List parties. Even before the election took place,
the Shia parties had effectively repudiated their call for the
withdrawal of foreign troops by declaring that it should only
take place when the US-sponsored Iraqi government had sufficient
troops to replace them. The backwardness of the country, combined
with the plunder of the countrys wealth by foreign corporate
interests, precludes any serious agenda to address the social
issues of the populationfrom the pervasive unemployment,
to the lack of basic infrastructure, to the general poverty. The
Shiite masses, in other words, will gain nothing from a puppet
regime dominated by the Shia elite.
In a sign of impending unrest, Moqtada al-Sadr, the clerical
leader of the Shiite uprising against the US occupation last year,
issued a statement this week directly challenging Sistani and
the Shia List over their compromise on the issue of removing American
troops.
Sadr has manoeuvred since agreeing to a ceasefire with the
US military last September, tacitly accepting the occupation while
trying to maintain his support base among the Shiite urban poor
with demagogic criticisms of the US. His statement is a further
sign that his base is becoming increasingly angry at the refusal
of the Shiite establishment to openly fight against the US occupation.
Sadr declared: I call on all religious and political
powers that pushed the elections and took part in them to issue
an official statement calling for a timetable for the withdrawal
of the occupation forces from Iraq. I stood aside from the elections
but did not stand against them as I did not want to show disobedience
toward the Marjaiyah [the religious council headed by Sistani].
I did not join these elections, however, so I wouldnt be
one of the Wests pawns.
The election outcome will have tremendous implications as the
year progresses. Alongside a continuing insurgency in the Sunni
regions, conflicts are inevitable between the US occupation and
the Shiite and Kurdish populations.
Moreover, it will take place under conditions where the political
mechanisms put in place by the US following the invasion have
become largely untenable. The Transitional Administrative Law
imposed on Iraq by the US in March 2004 defined a series of steps:
the election just held; the formation of a transitional government;
the formulation of a constitution by the Transitional Assembly;
a referendum to endorse the document; and, finally, an election
for the first National Assembly by January 2006.
This entire process is surrounded by doubt. The administrative
law included a clause that allowed a No vote by two-thirds
of voters in just three of the countrys 18 provinces to
prevent the adoption of a new constitution. The clause was inserted
to force the Shiite religious hierarchy, and those sections of
the Sunni-based elite, which are also collaborating with the occupation,
to accept a large measure of self-rule in the three Kurdish northern
provinces. If they did not, the vote in the Kurdish provinces
alone could defeat any proposed constitution. By way of compromise,
the Kurds were denied Kirkuk and the northern oilfields.
The conflicts between the competing factions in Iraq will re-emerge
as attempts begin to formulate a permanent constitution. The potential
exists for a complete political breakdown and raises the prospect
of civil war. Even if a constitution is developed, it risks being
rejected out-of-hand by the majority of one or more of the three
main communities. The statement by the Association of Muslim Scholars
this week indicates that the leading Sunni organisations will
not participate in drafting the document and will call for its
rejection in any referendum.
The predatory aims of the US invasion of Iraq always portended
that American imperialism would have to suppress the unresolved
democratic, social and national questions in the country and throughout
the Middle East. Washington has no more answer to them than the
Baathist regime of Saddam Hussein. US domination over Iraq can
only be maintained by ever-greater repression and terror.
See Also:
Vietnam 1967 & Iraq 2005: using elections
to justify criminal wars
[5 February 2005]
WSWS replies to letters on Iraqs
election and the US occupation
[4 February 2005]
The American media and the Iraq election
[2 February 2005]
The Iraq election: a travesty
of democracy
[27 January 2005]
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