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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Amid calls from Clinton and Levin, US moves to oust Iraqi
prime minister
By James Cogan
23 August 2007
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Open calls by Democratic Party leaders this week for the removal
of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, combined with ongoing expressions
of frustration by Bush administration officials, indicate that
the Iraqi governments days are numbered. Moves are underway
in Washington and Baghdad to remove Maliki when the Iraqi parliament
returns from a summer break on September 4.
Carl Levin, the Democratic Party chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, told journalists at a press conference on
Tuesday: I hope that the Iraqi assembly, when it reconvenes
in a few weeks, will vote the Maliki government out of office
and will have the wisdom to replace it with a less sectarian and
a more unifying prime minister and government.
His statement followed a two-day visit to Iraq, during which
he and Republican Senator John Warner held talks with the US ambassador
Ryan Crocker, US military commander General David Petraeus and
the leaders of Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish factions who would have
to support a no-confidence motion to sack Maliki.
Hillary Clinton, the leading Democrat contender for the 2008
presidential nomination, endorsed Levins comments yesterday.
In a formal statement, Clinton declared: During his trip
to Iraq last week, Senator Levin... confirmed that the Iraqi government
is nonfunctional and cannot produce a political settlement because
it is too beholden to religious and sectarian leaders. I share
Senator Levins hope that the Iraqi parliament will replace
Prime Minister Maliki with a less divisive and more unifying figure
when it returns in a few weeks.
Clinton and Levin are the most senior US politicians to openly
advocate dispensing with Maliki. In doing so, however, they are
serving as the sounding board for a view that is widely held in
the American political and media establishment, including the
Bush administration. Crocker pointedly declared this week that
Malikis performance as prime minister had been extremely
disappointing.
At a press conference on Tuesday, Bush declared that the
Iraqis will decide whether or not to remove Maliki. They
have decided they want a constitution, they have elected members
to their parliament, and they will make the decisions, just like
democracies do, he said. In reality, the Iraqi people will
have no influence in determining Malikis fate. The country
is not a sovereign democracy. It is under American
military occupation. The government in Baghdad is little more
than a puppet regime. US interestsexpressed through diplomatic
means and if necessary by military oneswill ultimately determine
who sits as its head.
The overriding issue in Washington since the 2003 invasion
has been which political forces in Iraq can best serve the US
aims of plundering the countrys energy resources and using
its territory as a springboard for further wars of aggression
against Iran, Syria and other perceived obstacles to US domination
of the Middle East.
By these criteria, Maliki and his Shiite-dominated government
have fallen out of favour. Throughout this year, the Iraqi prime
minister has faced constant condemnation from the Bush administration
for failing to meet the so-called benchmarks imposed
as part of the surge of 30,000 additional US troops
to try to stabilise the US occupation of Iraq. Moreover, Maliki,
a Shiite fundamentalist with political and religious sympathies
for the Shiite regime in Iran, is considered an unreliable ally
under conditions of escalating US tensions with Tehran.
The key benchmarks required Maliki to pass legislation to allow
foreign investment in the countrys oil industry and repeal
a law excluding thousands of predominantly Sunni Arab members
of Saddam Husseins Baath Party from public office or military
posts. An end to what is known as de-Baathification
is one of Bush administrations overtures to convince ex-Baathist
and Sunni insurgents to end their armed resistance. Four-and-a-half
years after the invasion, the US military still has to maintain
over 150,000 troops in the country under conditions where the
majority of Americans oppose the war and want it ended.
Maliki, however, has been unable to get the Shiite United Iraqi
Alliance (UIA) to agree to US demands for concessions to the former
Sunni ruling elite. Any retreat from de-Baathification has been
opposed by Shiite clerical leaders and legislators who suffered
brutal repression at the hands of Husseins regime and are
not prepared to see their current power and privileges eroded
by the return of the old Baathist establishment.
Instead, the conflicts between the rival factions of the Iraqi
elite are being fought out in a vicious civil war, which has effectively
blocked any agreement on issues such as the future of the oil
industry. Sunni and Shiite militias have cleansed
entire suburbs and districts of members of the opposing sect,
killed thousands of people and turned close to two million into
internally displaced refugees. Many Sunni Iraqis have come to
view most of the Iraqi army and police as little more than Shiite
death squads with American-supplied equipment and uniforms.
Within this context, a discernable US shift has been taking
place. From primarily relying on Shiite parties as the foundation
for the Iraqi state and security forces since 2003, Washington
has increasingly cultivated a base of support in Sunni areas.
General Petraeus has ordered the US military to bypass Maliki
and carry out its own policy of reconciliation with
Sunni insurgents.
Tens of millions of dollars have been handed out to various
tribes and guerilla groups for ceasing attacks on US troops in
exchange for an amnesty and assisting the US military to hunt
down fighters who refuse to be bought off. Tens of thousands of
Sunni militiamenoutside the structures of the Iraqi security
forcesare now being directly paid by the American government.
In effect, a large swathe of western and central Iraq has been
handed over to Sunni warlords who until recently were fighting
the US occupation and are continuing to support the civil war
against the Shiite-led government.
At the same time as assisting Sunni armed groups, Petraeus
has ordered a series of attacks on the strongholds of the largest
Shiite militia, the Mahdi Army of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, alleging
that it is being armed and trained by Iran to carry out sectarian
violence and attacks on US troops. In June, the Sadrist movement
responded to the popular Shiite outrage over the attacks on the
militia and walked out of the government. US operations into Shiite
areas have only intensified in the weeks since. Iranian-backed
Shiite militias, not Sunni fundamentalist groups supposedly linked
to Al Qaeda, are now being demonised as the greatest threat to
the American military.
The policies accompanying the US surge have emboldened the
Sunni-based parliamentary factions to try to force the formation
of a new government in which they would control the main levers
of power. In July, the Sunni Iraqi Accordance Front denounced
Maliki as a sectarian Shiite regime and instructed its ministers
to resign from his cabinet. This month, ministers from former
interim prime minister Iyad Allawis Iraqi National List
announced a boycott of cabinet meetings.
When the parliament resumes in less than two weeks, Maliki
will face a hostile chamber. Following the walkouts from the cabinet,
his government is openly opposed by 58 members of Sunni Arab parties;
the 25 members of the so-called secular alliance headed by Allawi;
and the 15 members of the Basra-based Shiite Islamic Virtue Party
(Fadhila).
Constitutionally, the votes of just 25 percent of the 275 legislators
are required to move a no-confidence motion. If the motion is
supported by a simple majority of 138, the president, Kurdish
leader Jalal Talabani, must call for the election of a new prime
minister and the formation of a new cabinet. Maliki is formally
backed by only some 80 legislators who remain within the Shiite
UIA. The 53 Kurdish nationalist legislators have not indicated
how they would vote. Nor has the governments main Shiite
rival, the 32-member Sadrist bloc loyal to cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
How the various cliques and factions in the Iraqi parliament
ultimately line up in any no confidence vote will be decided by
a process of diplomacy, threats and bribery over the next several
weeks, in which ambassador Crocker and General Petraeus have been
and will be principal players.
Iyad Allawi, however, a former Baathist turned CIA operative
who has collaborated for three decades with US intrigues in the
Middle East, is receiving undisguised backing in the US as the
best candidate for Iraqi prime minister. The Washington Post
published an opinion piece by Allawi on Saturday, in which he
outlined a six-point Plan for Iraq.
His plan, not surprisingly, dovetails completely with US interests
and demands. Its key elements include Malikis removal; the
declaration of martial law across most of the country; an offensive
against sectarian elements, i.e., Shiite militias, in the security
forces; telling Iran to end its interference in Iraq;
and an immediate end to de-Baathification in the name of reconciliation.
Should the Iraqi parliament fail to form a government acceptable
to Washington, other options exist. Over the past 12 months, a
number of articles have appeared in the American media referring
to discussions in the Bush administration over organising a military
coup against Maliki.
US imperialism has a record of using such methods to dispense
with unsatisfactory puppet regimes. In 1963, frustrated with the
failure of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem to crush the
Viet Cong liberation movement, the Kennedy administration encouraged
dissident factions of the army to seize the presidential palace,
murder Diem and impose a dictatorship that was subservient to
US plans for a massive build-up of American troops and the intensification
of the war.
See Also:
14 US soldiers killed in Iraq helicopter
crash
[23 August 2007]
US military launches offensive against
"Iranian-backed" militia in Iraq
[16 August 2007]
Iraqi government on brink of collapse
following cabinet walkouts
[11 August 2007]
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