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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraqs national assembly shows its subservience to Washington
By Peter Symonds
21 March 2005
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For all the rhetoric about democracy, the first
session of Iraqs National Assembly last Wednesday could
not hide the bodys subservience to the US occupiers, its
impotency and its deep-seated factional differences.
Even under the British Raj, the leaders of the Indian Congress
last century used the limited representative forums to challenge
their colonial masters. At last weeks assembly, there was
not a hint of opposition or protest as the representatives of
various parties, all of which supported the US invasion, took
their seats.
In Washington, President George Bush described the session
as a bright moment in the constitutional process.
In Baghdad, Washingtons political stooges parrotted the
same line.
US-installed interim prime minister Ayad Allawi, who is due
to step down, proclaimed the country to be at the gate of
a new reign of freedom, dignity and democracy. Dawa Party
leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari, who is likely to become the next prime
minister, declared: This day marks a new birth for all Iraqis.
But the circumstances of the gathering speak otherwise. The
session had to be held in the convention centre in the heavily
fortified Green Zoneheadquarters for the US occupation.
Police set up checkpoints and a security cordon throughout central
Baghdad, banning the presence of vehicles. Delegates had to walk
to the hall and submit to body searches. US Apache helicopter
gunships hovered overhead. Despite the heavy security, several
mortar rounds landed in the Green Zone as the assembly was due
to convene.
The next government will be just as dependent militarily, politically
and economically on the US as the Allawi regime. It will be bound
by all the edicts and regulations issued by former US occupation
chief, Paul Bremer, including the Transitional Administrative
Law (TAL), which establishes the framework for elections and a
new constitution. All significant decisions about Iraqs
future will not be made in Baghdad, but in Washington.
The Bush administration only agreed to elections following
mass demonstrations by the Shiite supporters of Ayatollah Ali
Sistani, who was demanding a popular vote. The poll on January
30 took place under a state of siege. The overwhelming majority
of Sunni voters, who make up about 20 percent of the population,
boycotted the election. Overall, only 57 percent of registered
voters cast a ballot.
The United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), based among Shiites, who comprise
about 60 percent of the population, won a narrow majority of seats.
Even though its major constituentsthe Dawa Party and Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI)backed
the Iraq invasion, the UIA had to appeal to anti-US sentiment
by promising to end the occupation.
The narrow base of support for the US presence was underscored
by the small vote for Washingtons preferred candidatethe
incumbent Allawi. Despite an aggressive campaign against the UIAs
Islamist program and Iranian links, his Iraqi List was only able
to secure 14 percent of votesthat is, about 7 percent of
the population. The party of current president Ghazi al-Yawar
mustered less than 2 percent of the vote.
The Kurdish Alliance (KA), comprising the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, won 26 percent
of the vote by fostering the illusion that regional autonomy would
put an end to the persecution and poverty of the Kurds.
None of these parties have any solution to the social disaster
caused by the US invasion. Two years after the invasion the majority
of Iraqis lack jobs and, in many cases, the basic necessities
of life. The countrys infrastructureelectricity, water
and sanitationas well as essential services such as education
and health are in a state of collapse.
The competing factions of the Iraqi ruling elite are each stirring
up sectarian and ethnic differences, firstly, to deflect popular
anger and hostility over living standards and the occupation and,
secondly, to augment their own privileged position.
Dominant sections of the Shiite political and religious establishment
regard the UIA and the demand for an Islamic state as the means
to secure their state control for the first time. However, they
have come into sharp conflict with the KA, which wants to strengthen
the powers of an autonomous Kurdish region that would include
the northern city of Kirkuk and neighbouring oil-rich region.
No new government
The most striking aspect of last Wednesdays National
Assembly was its failure to take the first step toward establishing
a new governmentthe appointment of a new president and two
vice-presidents. After seven weeks of backroom haggling, the UIA
and KA failed to finalise any agreement. The televised session,
which lasted a mere 95 minutes, consisted of banal speeches following
a formal swearing-in. The parties could not even agree on the
appointment of a permanent assembly speaker.
The protracted negotiations are necessitated by the requirement
in the Transitional Administrative Law of a two-thirds majority
for the appointment of the president and vice-presidents, who
in turn select the prime minister. The prime minister and cabinet
then require the approval of a simple majority in the assembly
before taking office. This complex indirect mechanism was one
of several safeguards insisted on by Kurdish and Sunni politicians
to give them an effective veto over a potential Shiite majority
in the assembly. As a result, the UIA needs the support of the
KA, or a combination of smaller parties, in order to form government.
While the Bush administration and the international media have
sought to play down the difficulties, negotiations between the
UIA and KA have bogged down on basic issues. Kurdish politicians
have stopped short of demanding full independence, but are seeking
to maintain the substantial de facto autonomy they enjoyed when
US and allied warplanes protected the northern no-fly zone
from the Iraqi military under Saddam Hussein.
As well as seeking the incorporation of Kirkuk into the northern
Kurdish region, the Kurdistan Alliance is demanding substantial
local powers, including policing and finance, and the right to
maintain the Kurdish militia as a virtual standing army. To ensure
a strong voice in the government, the KA is seeking the presidency
and key ministerial posts such as foreign affairs.
The UIA has sought to delay any decision on Kurdish issues
until after the national assembly has drawn up a new constitution,
to be ratified by a referendum, in preparation for national elections
next January. Shiite politicians, who opposed the guarantees for
Kurdish and other minorities in the Transitional Administrative
Law, are hoping that fresh national elections under a new constitution
will put them in a strong position. Even if a compromise enables
a government to be formed, the same disputes will emerge again
in the writing of a constitution.
These issues are explosive ones, not just for Iraq, but the
broader region as a whole. The sharp disagreements between the
UIA and KA contain the seeds for bitter sectarian and ethnic conflicts
and possible descent into civil war. Any substantial concessions
to Kurdish autonomy has political ramifications for Iraqs
neighboursIran, Turkey and Syriawhich all have significant
Kurdish minorities. Turkey has already threatened military action
if Kirkuk and its oilfields are integrated into the autonomous
Kurdish region.
The lengthy delay in forming a new government is fuelling further
alienation and hostility. In comments to the press, ordinary Iraqis
expressed deep scepticism that the next government would address
any of their concerns.
Haithm Ali, a blacksmith, told the New York Times: I
dont expect any government to be formed. And they wont
find any solutions to the situation we find ourselves in... The
president and the cabinet wont do anything for this neighbourhood
[pointing to sewage-flooded streets]. They are only looking out
for their own interests.
Bassem Abdul Ahad, a spare parts merchant, exclaimed to the
Washington Post: Why cant we have electricity
24 hours a day like other civilised countries? Why cant
we feel secure in our own homes? If those people put aside their
personal interests, then we are in good shape. But if they remain
centred on their personal concerns, then I feel pessimistic about
this whole thing.
In an interview in the Los Angeles Times, Awad Abid
Zubaida, 35, scathingly referred to those who backed the US invasion.
You know, weve never had any real government and now
this is not a real government either; these are all the people
who came riding on American tanks. They did nothing before and
they will do nothing in the future. We dont really know
who is in charge or whether a government will be formed,
he said.
Currently Allawi remains in power as the caretaker prime minister
and he has not ruled out putting together a ruling coalition that
includes the KA and breakaway UIA factions. The longer the negotiations
between the UIA and KA drag on, the greater the room for Allawi
to manoeuvre and exploit divisions in the UIA. He certainly has
backing from the Bush administration for his political scheming.
To date, no deal has been reached between the KA and UIA. A
new session of the national assembly has been mooted for Thursday,
but there is no guarantee, even if it is convened, that it will
be any more successful than the one held last week.
See Also:
Washington's criminal war against Iraq
enters its third year
[19 March 2005]
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