Memo
To: Website Fans, Browsers, Clients
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Some Kind of Democracy
Isnt
it nice that come January there will be national elections in
Iraq? After all those years living under the despotic rule of
Saddam Hussein, the huddled Iraqi masses will be able to go to
polling places and cast their secret ballots to choose their representatives
in a national assembly? And the assembled representatives will
write a new constitution for Iraq leading to a really, true constitutional
democracy in 2006? At least thats what we were led to believe
when sovereignty was turned over July 1 to a hand-picked, U.S.-approved
interim government to be led by Iyad Allawi, the new
prime minister.
Now it seems
the electoral commission chosen by Allawi is fixing things so
the parties created by those Iraqis who lived in exile in recent
decades and who owe their allegiance to the United States will
be heavily favored in the ballot positioning. Allawi, who of course
is going to run for president on his own partys slate and
will be a shoo-in the way things are rigged, will not have to
worry about the Sunni nationalists messing up his chances because
they will boycott the rigged process.
Whats
going on here? Remember there was a war between Iran and Iraq
from 1980 to 1988? Several hundred thousand Iraqis died in the
war, which they were not supposed to win but win they did
when the Iranians sued for peace when outmaneuvered by Saddams
generals. Shiites and Sunnis who previously had considered themselves
first and foremost Shiites and Sunnis celebrated victory as nationalists,
Iraqis first and foremost. They may have had differences over
the way Saddam ran the country after the war, but to this day
they regard Allawi and the other Iraqis in exile as traitors,
quislings in fact, who had supported the Iranians in that long
war. Ahmed Chalabi, who was the neo-cons first choice to be prime
minister, to this day has a villa in Tehran and has been accused
by the CIA of leaking classified secrets to the Iranians.
Even the
majority of the Kurds, who would like to be independent of Iraq
but who know they cannot expect more than independent status within
an Iraqi federation, view Allawi and Co. as outsiders compared
to the political class that remained in Iraq and fought the enemy.
Roughly 85% of the Iraqi Kurds fought on the side of the Baghdad
government. The 15% who fought with Iran are those who are favored
by the Allawi electoral commission.
Can you see
how this aint going to work? No matter how much money the
U.S. pours into Iraq to feed the exile political crowd while it
establishes what every nationalist correctly views as a puppet
of Washington, D.C., there will be homegrown patriots willing
to take up arms as insurgents, i.e. freedom fighters,
the men Allawi calls terrorists. There would be no
end in sight to the civil war now underway within this political
framework, which is why Bob Novak could write last week that there
are those inside the Bush administration who figure on pulling
U.S. troops out of Iraq next year after the truncated January
elections.
Yes, there
would be a bloodier civil war, we might suppose, but with Allawi's
hands on the apparatus of the central government and the military
means to go after the insurgents with no holds barred, the neo-cons
in the Bush administration may calculate Allawi will come out
on top and they will have what they want after all. Thats
only speculation on my part, but I would still tend to agree with
Scott Ritter that Allawi and Co. could win a civil war. Can you
imagine Benedict Arnold running for President against Thomas Jefferson
and coming out on top?
Heres
the first glimmer of understanding in our news media that this
is whats up, by Dexter
Filkins of the NYTimes in his Thursday front-page dispatch:
According
to people with knowledge of the talks, Ayatollah Sistani is
concerned that the nascent democratic process here is falling
under the control of a handful of the largest political parties,
which cooperated with the American occupation and are comprised
largely of exiles.
In particular,
these sources say, Ayatollah Sistani is worried about discussions
now under way among those parties to form a single ticket for
the elections, thus limiting the choices of voters and smothering
smaller political parties.
Ayatollah
Sistani, who earlier this year sent tens of thousands of Iraqis
into the streets to demand early elections, is said to be worried
that a "consensus list" of candidates from the larger
political parties would artificially limit the power of the
Shiites, who form a majority in the country.