|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraqi government on brink of collapse following cabinet walkouts
By James Cogan
11 August 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The political survival of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is
in doubt following the withdrawal from his cabinet of two political
blocs that derive the bulk of their support from Iraqs Sunni
Arab population. A variety of sectarian and ethnic cliques in
Baghdad are reportedly involved in discussion with the Bush administration
over ousting Maliki and forming a new government when the Iraqi
parliament resumes in September.
Five ministers from the Iraqi Accordance Front (IAF) resigned
their positions last Wednesday. On July 25, the IAF gave Maliki
seven days to announce a major purge of Shiite militia members
within the new Iraqi army and police, increased funding for government
services in Sunni areas and the release of thousands of Sunnis
detained in US and government prisons on suspicion of involvement
in the anti-occupation insurgency. In their resignation statement,
the Sunni ministers accused Maliki of arrogance and
having led Iraq to a level of misery it had not seen in
modern history.
The IAF functions as the political wing of the powerful Association
of Muslim Scholars (AMS), an organisation of several thousand
clerics who bitterly resent the loss of Sunni influence following
the US overthrow of the largely Sunni-based Baathist regime of
Saddam Hussein. Since 2003, Shiite fundamentalist opponents of
Baath Party rule have dominated the various US puppet governments
in Baghdad. The AMS regularly accuses the Shiite-led government
of infiltrating Shiite militias into the security forces to murder
Sunni opponents. It also alleges the government deliberately restricts
services and reconstruction work in Sunni areas.
The walkout by the Sunni ministers had one primary aim: to
end Malikis ability to claim he heads a national unity
government that represents all Iraqs sectarian and ethnic
groupsone of the Bush administrations so-called benchmarks.
On Monday, they were joined by four ministers from the Iraqi National
List of Iyad Allawi, who announced they will boycott all cabinet
meetings until Maliki ends his marginalisation of
Sunnis.
A total of 17 ministers have now left or are boycotting his
cabinet. A member of Allawis list resigned earlier this
year while six ministers from the Sadrist Shiite movement walked
out in April. The Sadrists, who posture as opponents of the US
occupation, resigned after Maliki rejected the demand of their
leader, cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, for a timetable specifying when
all foreign troops would leave Iraq. The latest defections reduce
the cabinet to a barely functioning rump.
There is no doubt that the Bush administration is behind the
effort to bring down Malikis government. Iyad Allawi is
little more than a US stooge. In the lead-up to the war, he had
a hand in fabricating the lies that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction
and that the Iraqi people would welcome a US invasion. He was
rewarded in 2004, when the occupation installed him as the countrys
unelected interim prime minister. He undoubtedly harbours ambitions
to retake the position and would have sought Washingtons
blessing before announcing his Lists boycott of the cabinet.
Speaking from a luxury villa in Jordan where he spends much
of his time, Allawi summed up the US attitude toward Maliki in
the New York Times this week: The national unity
government is a myth, not a reality. The political process is
going nowhere.
US frustrations with Maliki have been growing since he was
named by the ruling United Iraqi Alliance (UIA) as its candidate
for prime minister in May 2006. He has been repeatedly accused
by the US military of thwarting its attempts to destroy the powerful
Sadrist militiathe Mahdi Army. While no longer in the cabinet,
the Sadrists still provide the main base of support for Maliki
within the Shiite UIA, along with his own Dawa Party. The
other major party in the coalition, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi
Council (SIIC), wants one of its leaders, current vice-president
Adel Abdul Mahdi, to be prime minister.
This year, Maliki has failed to even secure the necessary support
within his own coalition, let alone other factions, for Washingtons
benchmarks. Among the main US demands are legislation
that would open Iraqs oil industry to foreign investment
and an end to the policy of de-Baathification that
prevents thousands of predominantly Sunni ex-members of Husseins
party from holding government or military positions. In US circles,
the marginalisation of former Baathists is held responsible for
a large part of the insurgency in Iraq.
Fueling US antagonism toward not only Maliki but all the Shiite
factions in Iraq are their political and religious relations with
Iran. Under conditions of rising tensions between Washington and
Tehran, many Shiite politicians still consider Iran the natural
ally of a Shiite-dominated Iraqi state. Maliki again caused outrage
in Washington by meeting on Wednesday with Iranian leaders and
declaring Iran was playing a constructive role in
stabilising Iraq. A major element of US propaganda against Tehran
is the accusation that Iranian special forces are supplying rogue
Sadrist militiamen with explosives to attack US troops.
Throughout this year, the US military has been shifting away
from a Shiite-led government in Baghdad. It has sought to develop
an alternative base of support for the US occupation in Sunni
areas. Millions of dollars have been handed out to secure alliances
with Sunni tribal leaders and insurgent groups across Baghdad
and western and central Iraq. In the main, these new Sunni allies
are utterly hostile to Malikis government, which they denounce
as a puppet of Iran rather than Washington.
The 25,000 Sunni militiamen who have been recruited are viewed
by Maliki as a threat to Shiite power. His objections, however,
have been ignored by the US commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus,
and dismissed by the Bush administration.
The abandonment of Malikis government by the Sunni IAF
and Allawis List is bringing these simmering tensions to
a head. With just 21 ministers still loyal to the prime minister
out of the original 38, there is tremendous pressure even within
the Shiite UIA to propose an alternative leader rather than risk
being excluded from power altogether.
Intense manoeuvring is underway. Saleh al-Mutlaq, the leader
of the small Sunni Iraqi National Dialogue Front, told the New
York Times this week that he was seeking talks with the IAF,
Allawis group and the anti-UIA Shiite Fadhila Party over
forming a rival coalition. If such a grouping were able to get
the support of the 55-strong Kurdistan Alliance (KA) in the parliament,
it would have an outright majority and could govern without any
of the Shiite fundamentalist parties. Allawi would be the most
likely candidate for prime minister.
According to the Egypt-based Al-Ahram, the Bush administration
is working on another option. Bush has reportedly held phone conversations
over the past two weeks with SIICs leading candidate for
prime minister, Adel Abdul Mahdi, as well as the partys
leader, cleric Abdul Aziz al-Hakim. He has also spoken with Kurdish
president Jalal Talabani and Sunni vice-president Tariq Hashemi.
The US is apparently backing the creation of a new coalition
consisting of SIIC, factions of Dawa prepared to abandon
Maliki, Allawis List, Hashemis faction of the Iraqi
Accordance Front and the Kurdish parties. Allawi or Mahdi would
head such a government. It would exclude Maliki and the Sadrists,
as well as Fadhila and Sunni groupings such as Mutlaqs which
are antagonistic toward US demands for the sell-off of Iraqs
oil.
The price being demanded by the Kurdish parties is clear. They
would want Kurdish control over the northern city of Kirkuk and
the oilfields that surround it. Hinting at their willingness to
be bought, Talabani pointedly declared last week that the Sunni
criticisms of Maliki were mostly fair. Mahmoud Othman,
a Kurdish legislator, told the Al-Ahram Weekly that the
Kurdish parties wanted to enhance reconciliation by including
Allawi in the political process.
SIICs collaboration in a move against Maliki has a similar
price. It has been pushing for the creation of an autonomous region
in its southern Iraqi stronghold that would control the countrys
southern oilfields. SIICs regionalism is bitterly opposed
and would be resisted by the Baghdad-centred Sadrist movement.
If SIIC and the Kurdish parties have their way, Iraq will be effectively
partitioned along ethnic and sectarian linesa move that
can only accelerate large-scale ethnic cleansing, sectarian violence
and instability, not only in Iraq but throughout the region.
The Bush administrations barely disguised efforts to
oust Maliki once again make a mockery of its claims to have created
a sovereign, democratic government in Baghdad. Whatever the final
outcome of its political manipulations, the White House is seeking
a new regime that will more effectively implement US demands,
particularly for the opening up of Iraqi oilfields to US corporations,
and ruthlessly suppress ongoing opposition to the occupation.
Moreover, by eliminating or at least diluting Shiite influence
in the Baghdad government, the US is clearing the decks for a
sharp escalation of its confrontation with Iran, including the
use of military force.
See Also:
US generals insist on no troop withdrawal
from Iraq
[9 August 2007]
Sharp tensions between US military and
Iraqi prime minister
[3 August 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |