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We vote, then we throw you out
By Pepe Escobar
12/14/05 "Asia
Times" -- -- First, a quick look at the environment
ahead of Thursday's elections in Iraq. Political assassinations,
party headquarters burned, abductions (all largely unreported by
Western corporate media). A former prime minister, Iyad Allawi -
widely known in Baghdad as "Saddam without a moustache" - saying on
the record that human rights in President George W Bush's Iraq are
worse than they were under Saddam.
Current Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari's Da'wa Party accusing Allawi
of defending the occupiers. Allawi accusing Jaafari's government of
corruption. Former Pentagon asset Ahmad
Chalabi's campaign posters with the inscription, "We liberated
Iraq."
A network of secret torture prisons and charnel houses. Fear and
loathing in militia hell. American military operations to "secure
peaceful voting". All traffic circulation prohibited by the
occupiers (to prevent car bombings). The borders with both Syria and
Jordan, as well as Baghdad's airport, all closed.
Satanic, free and fair
We all knew what some were going to say. Saddam Hussein - preparing
his next coup de theater in court - declared the elections "a
farce". Al-Qaeda in the Land of the Two Rivers, plus four other
jihadi groups, denounced them as "a satanic project", vowing to
perpetuate the jihad, fighting for "an Islamic state ruled by the
book [the Koran] and the traditions of Prophet Mohammed".
Other positions are more nuanced. On Monday, a leaflet was widely
distributed in the Azamiyah neighborhood in Baghdad stating that
Sunni Arabs might have a chance to reinforce their position through
the elections, but "the fighting will continue with the infidels and
their followers".
The Bush administration spin - faithfully reproduced by Western
corporate media quoting the usual ("US officials") suspects -
follows the same wishful script: a "large turnout" among the
"disaffected Sunni Arab minority" that "could" produce a government
"capable of winning the trust of the Sunnis", "defusing the
insurgency" and thus leading the US "and other foreign troops" to
start going home by 2006.
The favorite Anglo-American election candidate supposedly capable of
pulling it all off is once again Allawi - a truculent secular
Shi'ite who was once a Ba'athist (he has kept the good connections)
before he became anti-Saddam and a US intelligence asset. The White
House may forget it, but Iraqis don't; Allawi gave the go-ahead for
the American leveling of Fallujah and the American bombing of holy
Najaf in 2004.
A few days ago he was bombarded with shoes and chased away from the
Imam Ali shrine in Najaf. British Prime Minister Tony Blair supports
him and considers him "the best hope" for Iraq. Pentagon analysts
agree, as one of them told The New Yorker's Seymour Hersh that "he
would allow us to keep Special Forces operations inside Iraq ...
mission accomplished. A coup for Bush."
But no amount of feel good stories disguise the fact that the
American project is doomed to fail because the premise itself is
flawed - a semblance of democracy as the offspring of an illegal
invasion and foreign occupation. Moreover, this White House-promoted
and/or imposed "fast food democracy" has been sectarian-based from
the start. It is inexorably leading to the Lebanonization of Iraq, a
phenomenon parallel to the Iraqification of the occupation.
Iraqi voters have their own reasons to question whether these
elections are free and fair. For starters, most are not interested;
what really glues them to TV sets is Saddam on trial (the majority
of Iraqis, Shi'ites and Kurds, has already condemned him to death).
There's poor security for the voters; they can only hope they won't
be blown to smithereens when they take the mandatory walk to the
polling station to choose between 231 political parties, coalitions
and individual candidates.
And there's little security for the almost 7,000 candidates either.
The bulk of the campaigning has been on TV; this means only a few
flush parties stood a chance. Live campaigning led in many cases to
abduction and even assassination. Moreover, most voters are not
exactly sure of what they're doing. Recent polls have revealed that
at least half of the Iraqi population is still not convinced of the
merits of Western-style democracy, at least the White House-promoted
version.
Half believe that the occupiers should have never set foot in
Mesopotamia. Sixty percent think that they turned the country into
an even bigger disaster than it was after the Iran-Iraq war of the
1980s, the first Gulf war in 1991 and 12 years of United Nations
sanctions. And two thirds of the population wants the occupiers out.
Half the people polled by the BBC said Iraq needed a strong leader
(a "Saddam without a moustache"?) And only 28% said democracy was a
priority.
The full Shi'ite agenda
It takes just a little political acumen to tell which way the
(desert) wind blows. By the end of November, Shi'ite firebrand
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr had made his move, coming out with all his
political guns blazing to promote a "pact of honor", which he called
Iraqi parties to subscribe to.
Last Thursday, in the Baghdad neighborhood of Kadhimiya, the
14-point pact was signed by an impressive array of political
heavyweights. Among them: the two main Shi'ite parties, the Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and Da'wa; the
Sadrists; the Iraqi Concord Front (which is a coalition of the three
major Sunni Arab parties); Ahmad Chalabi (in person); members of the
de-Ba'aathification committee; a number of tribal chiefs; unions;
social associations; and government employees.
Among the crucial points of the pact are: withdrawal of the
occupiers and setting of an objective timetable for their withdrawal
from Iraq; elimination of all the consequences of their presence,
including any bases for them in the country, while working seriously
for the building of [Iraqi] security institutions and military
forces within a defined schedule; no more immunity for the
occupation troops; no relations whatsoever with Israel; a
condemnation of terrorism ("We condemn terrorism and acts of
violence, killing, abducting and expulsion aimed at innocent
citizens for sectarian reasons."); a condemnation of the Ba'ath
Party as "a terrorist organization" and an urge "to speed up the
trial of overthrown president Saddam Hussein"; and a decision to
"postpone the implementation of the disputed principle of
federalism".
This, in a nutshell, is the Shi'ite agenda for the new Iraq,
potentially embracing 62% of the population of roughly 25 million to
26 million. The pact may have been a Sadrist move, but there's no
reason to believe these decisions will not be implemented as the
United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), which is dominated by the SCIRI, Da'wa
and the Sadrists, is set to become the majority in the new,
275-member Iraqi National Assembly. The whole numbers issue in the
elections is by which percentage the UIA will be a majority compared
to the Kurdistan coalition and the Iraqi Concord Front.
The main players
The UIA, list number 555, created with the blessing of Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, received almost 50% of the votes in the
January elections. Now the 18-party UIA is weaker because some
parties defected. Sistani stated his position last Sunday. In
January, he practically ordered all Shi'ites to vote for the UIA.
Now, he is more nuanced. "These elections are just as important as
the preceding ones, and citizens - both male and female - must
participate in them on a wide scale in order to guarantee a big and
powerful presence for those who will safeguard their verities and
work energetically for their higher interests in the next
parliament."
Although not explicitly endorsing the UIA, he did advise all
Shi'ites to not split and not waste their vote; this would mean
something like "vote for the UIA, not for Allawi". Politically, the
UIA has been heavily criticized by Iraqis themselves for being
utterly impotent - and incompetent - while dealing with corruption
and fighting against both the Sunni Arab resistance and the jihadi
groups.
The eight-party Kurdistan coalition list, number 730, remains
dominated by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, headed by the current
Iraqi president, Jalal Talabani, and the Kurdish Democratic Party,
headed by Masoud Barzani, the president of Iraqi Kurdistan. They
have been allies to the UIA in government for the past 10 months,
but the infighting is abysmal. The only thing the Kurds actually
care about is Kirkuk and its oil wealth - and how they can prevent
Sunni Arabs and Turkmen from having a slice of the cake.
The 15-group Iraqi National List, number 731, secular and
pan-sectarian, is headed by Allawi. The list includes the Communist
Party, former foreign minister (pre-Saddam) Adnan al-Pachachi (a
Sunni Arab), a few tribal sheikhs and even some liberal Shi'ite
clerics.
They say they will fight the Sunni Arab resistance (would that mean
leveling Ramadi now instead of Fallujah?), establish a strong
central government (SCIRI, Da'wa and the Sadrists would never let
them get away with it), revise the de-Ba'athification laws (so
Allawi can get his former pals back to government) and return more
former officers of the Iraqi Army disbanded by former proconsul L
Paul Bremer to the new security forces (once again, over the dead
body of the SCIRI, Da'wa and the Sadrists).
The Iraqi Concord Front, number 618, is an alliance of three mostly
Islamist Sunni Arab groups. All of them boycotted the January
elections. Their platform includes total American withdrawal, and of
course bringing back former Sunni Arab Iraqi Army officers. They
also want to change the constitution - again - eliminating the
newfound regional power and reinforcing the authority of Baghdad.
The 10-party Iraqi National Congress (INC) list, number 569, is
headed by former Pentagon asset, current deputy prime minister and
eternal revivalist, Chalabi. He split from the UIA to form his own
group. Chalabi obviously preaches fighting against the Sunni Arab
resistance and in impeccable populist fashion promised every Iraqi
family cash derived from Iraq's oil money plus a piece of land for
every family that did not yet own a home.
All's well in militia hell
When they are not occupied dodging bullets or trying to spend at
least one hour of the day with some water and electricity, Iraqis
see rot piling up everywhere. The Allawi-Chalabi (they are cousins)
mini-war gets dirtier by the day. The British government is
according to some unconfirmed reports pulling out all the stops to
stall an investigation into the theft of more than US$1.3 billion
from the Ministry of Defense. This favors - who else - Allawi,
because the money "disappeared" during his corruption-infested six
months as prime minister.
Then there's the rot in the Ministry of Interior. Bayan Jabr, the
minister, is from the SCIRI. He controls about 110,000 men armed to
their teeth. The SCIRI's militia, the Badr Organization, formerly
the Badr Brigade, rule the ministry and have infiltrated
paramilitary police commandos, which are in fact "legal" death
squads specialized in terrorizing Sunni Arabs. In parallel,
Muqtadar's Mahdi Army controls most of Baghdad's police. Many people
tend to forget that Baghdad is a predominantly Shi'ite city.
This country is no more
None of this points to national cohesion. "Iraq" as we know it - the
unified, heavily centralized state with arbitrary borders drawn on a
paper napkin by Britain after World War I - may be on its way to
extinction after these elections.
Partition is de facto in the four provinces of Kurdistan - roughly
between 15% and 20% of the total population, self-governed and with
their own army and police. The billion-dollar question is how the
SCIRI, Da'wa and the Sadrists will conform a Shi'iteistan composed
of nine Shi'ite provinces out of Iraq's 18. This would be the
logical outcome after the American-designed constitution approved in
the October 15 referendum. The SCIRI's leader, Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim,
definitely wants a Shi'iteistan.
The US would be left with little more than the Green Zone - which is
not exactly an oil lake - and a lot of empty desert. Essentially,
Kurds and Shi'ites will be able to decide what to do with their oil
revenues. The Kurds, for instance, have already signed a contract
with a Norwegian oil company to drill for oil.
Election or no election, the ultimate blood-drenched quagmire will
remain fully operational. Al-Qaeda will keep suicide bombing to
death. Shi'ite death squads will keep executing Sunni Arabs. Shi'ite
and Kurd politicians will keep squabbling - while Kurdistan and
Shi'iteistan further ignore Baghdad. The Americans will keep
controlling nothing - not even the road from the airport to the
Green Zone. "Reconstruction" will remain non-existent - until the
probably not-too-distant day when the Shi'ite signatories of the
"pact of honor" - the probable election winners - will muster the
will to tell the occupiers "you're out - and don't forget to pack
your military bases as well".
Copyright 2005 Asia Times Online
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