Iraq: Democracy or Disintegration?
by
Jim Lobe
by Jim Lobe
One
day after the formal presentation by a majority of Iraq's elected
leaders of their proposed constitution, opinions here and in Baghdad
appeared divided over whether the draft would lead to greater democracy
or the virtual, if not actual, disintegration of the country.
While
U.S. officials predictably put the most positive spin on the charter,
which will now be submitted to the Iraqi electorate for a vote Oct.
15, other analysts warned that its provisions for regional autonomy
would hasten the country's descent into a sectarian civil war that
could eventually draw in neighboring states.
"I
do not believe in this division between Shia and Sunni and Muslims
and Christians and Arabs and Kurds," the secretary-general
of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, told BBC Monday. "I find in
this a true recipe for chaos and perhaps a catastrophe in Iraq and
around it."
Still
others argued that the language regarding the special place of Islam
and Islamic law in the constitution may worsen the plight of religious
minorities, particularly Christians, and women, despite repeated
pledges by the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush that
women's and minority rights were among Washington's highest priorities
in Iraq.
"Religious
minorities as well as women will suffer under Iraq's proposed constitutional
architecture," asserted Nina Shea, the director of Freedom
House's Center for Religious Freedom and the vice-chair of the quasi-governmental
U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, in an article
published by the right-wing National Review online.
"We
fear greatly that this and other provisions are the opening wedge
for the imposition of a regime of group rights, which are anathema
to secure individual rights and protections a recipe for
wider civil strife based on narrow identity politics," she
and co-author Tom Cullinan wrote in reference to the constitution's
replacement of civil law on personal status by religious law.
The
fate of the new constitution, which was delayed by two weeks of
sometimes frantic but ultimately unsuccessful U.S. efforts to get
Sunni representatives to sign on, remains uncertain.
Under
current law, the constitution is automatically rejected if two-thirds
of voters in any three of Iraq's 18 provinces vote against it on
Oct. 15. That provision was originally designed by U.S. officials
to reassure Kurds, which have big majorities in three northern provinces,
that they could effectively veto any charter that did not provide
them with significant autonomy.
As
drafted, the new constitution indeed guarantees that autonomy to
the Kurds and, more significantly, establishes the groundwork for
offering it to as many as nine provinces in the overwhelmingly Shia
south.
But
that arrangement is anathema to many in the Sunni community who
favor a strong central government if, for no other reason, than
the Sunni heartland has few natural resources compared to the oil
and gas industries based in both the north and the south.
The
Sunnis, who are believed to make up about 20 percent of Iraq's total
population of about 25 million, hold overwhelming majorities in
two western provinces and a smaller majority in a third and thus,
ironically, could conceivably single-handedly defeat the charter
in the October referendum.
In
addition, however, Moqtada Sadr, the young Shi'ite cleric whose
Mehdi paramilitary forces have recently flexed their muscles against
rival Shi'ite militias, has also indicated strong opposition to
the constitution, which he has reportedly called part of an "Iranian
plot" to assert control over the southern part of the country
through the region's largest political party, the Supreme Council
for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), and its Iranian-trained
militia, the Badr Organization.
Sadr's
popularity in teeming Sadr City in Baghdad, combined with the large
Sunni population in the capital, could deliver Baghdad province
by the requisite margin into the "no" column come Oct.
15, thus assuring the charter's rejection.
Some
analysts in and out of the administration argue that the possibility
of the constitution's rejection may be a blessing because it may
encourage more Sunnis to participate in the political process, if
only to assure the charter's defeat in the referendum.
Since
the Jan. 30 elections, persuading the Sunnis to participate in the
process has been a top priority for a Bush administration that,
guided by its military commanders, has become increasingly persuaded
that the war in Iraq has no military solution.
Indeed,
the visit earlier this month to Baghdad by Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, as well as Thursday's telephone call by Bush to SCIRI leader
Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, were aimed above all at persuading him to compromise
with the Sunni leadership.
If
the constitution is defeated in the referendum, Fareed Zakaria,
former Foreign Affairs managing editor and editor of Newsweek
International, told ABC News' This Week Sunday, "Sunnis
[will] have demonstrated that they have real power. And they'll
be reincorporated. That
is the good-news scenario."
"The
bad-case scenario," he went on, "they're not able to defeat
it.
[Then the Sunnis] retain all the alienation, all the
antipathy, and forge ahead not defeating it peacefully, but defeating
it the way they're trying now, which is violently and through civil
war."
Indeed,
some believe that the way in which the Sunnis were marginalized
in the constitution-drafting process as well as the charter's
provisions on regional autonomy and against the participation of
former Ba'athist officials in government may already have
served to fuel the insurgency.
For
several weeks, the Sunni leaders have argued that they only joined
the drafting process at the risk of assassination by insurgents
who have opposed their participation on the understanding
that a consensus document would be the result, only to be sidelined
in the last two weeks by deal-making between the Kurds and Shi'ites.
Indeed,
many analysts, including administration officials, predicted that
insurgent violence was likely to intensify, while one Sunni delegate,
Husain al-Falluji, told reporters that the constitution was a recipe
for Iraq's violent partition that would "serve American interests."
While
some U.S. officials dismissed such remarks as posturing by Sunni
leaders who were cowed by the insurgency and do not represent their
community anyway (despite having been hand-picked by the U.S. embassy),
in fact, calls for partitioning Iraq have been growing louder in
Washington, notably among some neoconservatives.
In
a widely-noted column in the Los Angeles Times last week,
former Justice Department official John Yoo, now with the American
Enterprise Institute, argued that the administration was "spending
blood and treasure to preserve a country that no longer makes sense
as a state."
"[T]he
U.S. might get closer to its goals in the Middle East," he
wrote, "if everyone would jettison the fiction of a unified,
single Iraq."
August
31, 2005
Jim
Lobe [send him mail]
is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2005 Inter Press Service
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