Saturday, June 12, 2010

Iraq election rivals meet in political ice breaker ...

In this image released by the Iraqi government, former premier Ayad Allawi, left, and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki meet in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, June 12, 2010. Iraq's top political rivals say they have taken a major step toward ending the power dispute that has stalled the nation's new government since March parliamentary elections. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and former premier Ayad Allawi met for the first time Saturday since the vote that Allawi's Sunni-dominated Iraqiya coalition narrowly won

June 12, 2010


Iraq election rivals meet in political ice breaker

BAGHDAD, The leaders of two rival political alliances battling to run Iraq's new government took a step toward ending their power dispute Saturday, as the Sunni-backed coalition that won March elections now faces being sidelined in parliament.

The 90-minute meeting between Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and former Premier Ayad Allawi was their first since the March 7 vote, and was described by aides as more of an icebreaker than the start of serious negotiations.

The secular but Sunni-dominated Iraqiya coalition that Allawi heads risks losing a grasp on its narrow electoral triumph due to infighting and outmaneuvering by al-Maliki and his fellow Shiite rivals.

As the new legislature convenes Monday, that prospect is serving as a lesson in Iraq's nascent democracy, where rules can bend. It also, more ominously, raises the possibility of a revitalized insurgency if Sunnis conclude that they have no place in government as U.S. troops pull out of Iraq.


"That's why it's important to have a unity government," Army Gen. Ray Odierno, top U.S. commander in Iraq, told a Pentagon news conference last week. "We don't want to see any group that feels it's been disenfranchised and even contemplates moving back to an insurgency."

Iraqiya alliance is struggling to capture key government posts - a task that should have been all but certain after it took more than a quarter of parliament's 325 seats
in the vote.

Iraqiya won 91 seats, two more than its closest rival. But Allawi, a secular Shiite, has little if any chance to reclaim the prime minister's job he held in 2004-05, and risks top Cabinet positions for Sunni allies if he insists on it, according to Iraqi officials close to ongoing negotiations.
Iraqiya "might have no postelection role," Hassan al-Alawi, a senior Iraqiya leader, said in an interview with The Associated Press. "They are walking a dangerous route."

He added: "Allawi will never be the PM."

Iraqiya's victory was initially heralded as a groundbreaking step toward a secular Iraqi government after years of Sunni-Shiite tensions that brought the country to the brink of civil war in 2005-07. For many in the West, it was a soothing outcome in the face of a U.S. military drawdown that will send home about 45,000 American troops this summer and leave security in the largely untested hands of Iraqi army and police forces.

But a back-room deal between two major Shiite coalitions, brokered with the help of Iran, birthed a new bloc, the National Alliance, aimed at wresting power from Iraqiya and dominating parliament with a combined 159 seats. Al-Maliki leads the new bloc's two or three top contenders to run the majority Shiite country.

A March court opinion open the question of whether parliament's largest power bloc is one decided by the vote or created after the election. Iraqiya and the National Alliance are each expected to claim it is the largest, setting up a fight that could last for weeks if not months.

In an opinion piece published Thursday in The Washington Post, Allawi accused al-Maliki of defying "the will of the people" by building the new alliance to amass power. Al-Maliki "refuses to acknowledge his defeat or Iraqis' clear desire for change and national progress," Allawi wrote.
But internal divisions have also bedeviled Iraqiya.

Iraqiya's top Sunni members are frustrated that Allawi has staked his claim on the prime minister's job, potentially at their cost, according to Iraqi officials involved in the ongoing power-brokering negotiations. One person close to the negotiations said Allawi may also be willing to take the presidency, a largely ceremonial but untested post, clearing the way for al-Maliki to remain prime minister. But that still would leave Sunnis without any of the top three government leadership positions, assuming one goes to a Kurd.

"I told Allawi that when you go on the platform, before the camera, make some balance for the figures around you," said al-Alawi, a Shiite.

Several Sunni leaders are either angling for an internal coup or threatening to leave Iraqiya - along with their supporters - if Sunnis do not obtain promises of high-ranking posts, according to the negotiators who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private negotiations more candidly.

The infighting also reflects frustration over changing rules that put Iraqiya at a disadvantage even after winning the vote, said Stephanie Sanok, an Iraq expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

"Allawi and Co. did a very good job of involving voters who had not voted in the past," Sanok said. "They are severely disappointed in this outcome."

Following the 2003 fall of Saddam Hussein, Sunnis who once ruled Iraq were sidelined in the nation's government and politics. That fueled the Sunni insurgency, leading to years of sectarian warfare.

Ambassador Gary Grappo, the political director at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, said Iraqiya's 91 seats still give it considerable sway in parliament, even if it is not declared the largest alliance. But he said Iraqiya must decide on which government posts for which to fight.

"Whether it's the prime minister or something else, or a bunch of somethings else and no prime minister, these are the things they have to weigh and weigh carefully," Grappo said. "I would say, however, that they have a strong hand to play and it's just a question of how well they play it."
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Saturday, June 12, 2010

Iraq rivals meet on government, no sign of breakthrough

BAGHDAD, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Iyad Allawi, leader of the winning Sunni-backed Iraqiya alliance, met under tight security at the office of the Council of Ministers, after weeks of sniping over who had the right to try to form the government.

Iraq's new parliament is to sit for the first time on Monday.

Allawi's cross-sectarian Iraqiya coalition narrowly won the March 7 vote with the heavy backing of Iraq's once-dominant Sunni minority.

But he faces being sidelined by a Shi'ite tie-up of Maliki's second-placed State of Law and the third-placed Iraqi National Alliance, which includes firebrand anti-U.S. cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

Allawi, a secular Shi'ite and former prime minister, has warned Iraq risks a return to full-blown sectarian warfare if Iraqiya is denied the right to lead the government.

But some of his Sunni allies fear they risk being locked out of a governing coalition completely if Allawi continues to insist on heading the government. The new Shi'ite alliance is still four seats short of a majority.

"This meeting opens the door for another meeting between the two sides and that meeting will further close the distance between them," said State of law official Ali al-Dabbagh, who is also the spokesman of Maliki's outgoing government.

"It's not fair for people to expect that one meeting will solve all problems," he said on state-run Iraqiya television, adding that all sides agreed it was important for Allawi's Iraqiya to be included in the next government in some way.

Analysts caution it could yet be weeks or months before a government is in place, meaning Iraq might be effectively rudderless as the U.S. military ends combat operations in August ahead of a full withdrawal next year.

U.S. forces plan to cut troop numbers from just under 90,000 to 50,000 by September 1.

Washington says it will press ahead despite the political deadlock, with overall violence down sharply from the height of sectarian bloodshed in 2006-07.

The past two months, however, have seen a rise in casualties from insurgent attacks as militants try to exploit the power vacuum.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE65B1VO20100612?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews?sp=true