Iraq - Communists, Islamists and nationalists

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My Enemy’s Friends
Frank Smyth, September 27, 2004

One event in Baghdad went unreported this month, not only by the mainstream media but also by the “alternative” press, even though it implies that U.S. control over Iraq’s political future may already be waning. In August, the White House supported the establishment of an Iraqi National Council comprising 100 Iraqis from various tribal, ethnic, and religious groups in an effort to influence the composition of an electoral oversight body. Yet this month, two large political parties, each of which has long been viewed with suspicion by Washington, came out ahead in the voting.

Many criticize the legitimacy of the process by which the Bush administration is hoping to steer Iraq toward national elections next January. The indirect elections took place under war conditions, and the Associated Press reported that mortars exploded near the convention site in Baghdad where delegates gathered. Iraqi delegates also expanded the number of vice-chairs in the national council from two to four. Had they not done so, the results might have been even more troubling for the White House.

In the September balloting, the delegate from the Supreme Assembly for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, Jawad al-Maliki, came in first with 56 votes. This is a Shiite group that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld lambasted as a tool of Iran during the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. Another Iraqi even less attractive to Washington, the Secretary General of the Iraqi Communist Party, Hamid Majid Moussa, came in second with 55 votes. Meanwhile, Rasim al-Awadi, the delegate from the Iraqi National Accord--the group once backed by the CIA and whose leader, Iyad Allawi, who was supported by the Bush administration to become the Iraqi prime minister--came in third with 53 votes. Nasir A`if al-Ani--the delegate from the Iraqi Islamic Party, a Sunni group, sympathetic to the Ba’athist-based, anti-American resistance operating both west and north of Baghdad--came in fourth with 48 votes.

By any count, getting only one ally elected out of four seats on this potentially all-important electoral oversight body does not bode well for the Bush administration. After the Iraqi National Council was formed, but before it voted, White House spokesman Scott McClellan, while at President Bush’s family ranch in Crawford, Texas, declared: “The selection of the council is a sign that the Iraqi people will not allow terrorist elements to stand in the way of their democratic future.”

But what if elections in Iraq early next year lead to a government unlike anything ever expected by the Bush administration? The respected Arabist from the University of Michigan, Juan Cole, was among the first to report the Iraqi National Council election results on his blog, www.juancole.com. “So,” he quipped, “this list is further evidence that the U.S. invaded Iraq to install in power a coalition of Communists, Islamists and ex-Ba’athist nationalists. If you had said such a thing 3 years ago you would have been laughed at.”

4 para's taken from

http://www.guerrillanews.com/war_on_terrorism/doc5315.html

A quick google finds that the INC exists. Don't know the make up.
 
Thanks for the post.

It is hard to beat Saddam for shear ruthless governing and willingness to use nasty weapons. Democracy is messy. I don't think that the Bush administration is expecting Thomas Jefferson to come out ahead in an Islamic country. Iran needs to be defanged and one hopes that the Iraqi people vote wisely. We don't need a miracle. We just need a government that doesn't pass nasty weapons and money to those attacking us. I know that Bush hopes for a growing middle class and emulation elsewhere. It is a long shot, but worth the effort.
 
Tearing down a ruthless dictatorship like Sadaam's and attempting to replace it with democratically inspired rule of law is not a bad thing. Imposing Democracy itself at the point of a bayonet is, however, anti-Democratic.
 
I guess that one persons liberation is another's imposition of democracy. I think that the Iraqi people will have their own way and that is the basis of democracy. So, one might say that the U.S. forced the Iraqi people to make their own choices. Sounds like a horrible thing.
 
The Iraqi Communist Party was hiding out under the protection of the US/British no-fly zone in Iraq. They didn't just wander out of the streets of Baghdad. IIRC, they are affiliated with a group in DC connected to Mad Halfbrite and some of our other wonderful hierarchy in DC.
 
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