Was
the Vote on the Iraqi Constitution Fixed?
by
Kevin B. Zeese
by Kevin B. Zeese
"It
wouldn't surprise me if the election was rigged," said a U.S.
Army officer in Mosul who requested anonymity from Time
and who worked on security arrangements for the poll with Iraqi
security and election officials. "I don't even trust our
election process."
If
democracy is supposed to provide legitimacy to government – what
does a fraudulent election provide? The U.S. occupation, already
suffering a host of problems – false reasons for the invasion, lack
of international support, waning support in the U.S., Abu Ghraib
prison scandals, the Fallujah attack, the killing of civilians,
a strengthening insurgency, lack of support by former generals and
foreign service officers, and generals on the ground saying the
presence of U.S. troops is increasing the strength of the insurgency
– now has a voting scandal on its hands.
For
many of us who work on democracy issues in the United States the
specter of President Bush bringing democracy to the world has always
been ironic. The President was appointed by a politicized 5-4 U.S.
Supreme Court decision after the vote count was stopped in Florida
– when the vote count was completed by media outlets it showed Vice
President Al Gore had won. Yet, the President in his second inaugural
promised to bring democracy to countries where it does not exist.
And, he insists we continue to occupy Iraq in order to bring democracy
to that much-beleaguered country.
The
vote on the proposed new Iraqi Constitution was critical to President
Bush's efforts. It was a vote the administration had to win to prevent
a large increase in opposition to Iraq in Congress. But now, the
vote count has been delayed in the midst of claims of unusual results
in some critical Iraqi provinces.
The
Constitution can be defeated either by not receiving majority support
nationally or by being opposed by two-thirds of voters in three
governorates. It appears that two predominantly Sunni Arab governorates,
Anbar and Salaheddin, have voted against the constitution by a two-thirds
vote according to press reports.
The
provinces of Diala and Ninawah, which are ethnically mixed but thought
to be majority Sunni, may be decisive in determining whether opponents
of the draft have the two-thirds majority needed to defeat it. In
Diala early returns showed 55 percent opposed – within the credibility
of the mixed electorate.
More
controversial are reports that up to 70 per cent of the voters in
Ninawah voted "yes," a tally that some local Sunni Arab
politicians say does not correspond with reports that they received
on election day. According to the Financial
Times, Saleh al-Mutlek, a Sunni politician and prominent
opponent of the charter, said that in the provincial capital of
Mosul, carloads of Iraqi National Guards had seized ballot boxes
from a polling station and transferred them to a governorate office
controlled by Kurds. "There is a scheme to alter the results"
of the referendum, he claimed. Other Sunnis have claimed members
of the main Shia and Kurdish parties in some governorates had filled
out blank ballots and stuffed them into boxes after the polls closed
resulting in unusually high numbers of voters.
In
the constitutional vote huge discrepancies were reported in the
Nineveh governorate, whose capital is Mosul. Sources close to the
Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) said that 55% of the voters
there voted against the constitution, Abd al-Razaq al-Jiburi, the
secretary general of the Iraqi Independent Front said, "I have
been informed by an employee of the electoral high commission in
Mosul that the voting for the constitution has been ‘no.’"
He added, according to reporter Dahr
Jamail, that his sources within the IEC said the "no"
vote in Nineveh ranged between 7580%.
On
September 30, historian and national security expert Gareth
Porter wrote: "it now appears very likely that the document
will be defeated by a two-thirds majority in the three Sunni-dominated
provinces of Anbar, Salahadeen and Nineveh, plunging Iraq into a
new political crisis." He went on to write: "However,
one way such a defeat could be averted is by massive vote fraud
in the key province of Nineveh. According to an account provided
by the US liaison with the local election commission, supported
by physical evidence collected by the IEC, Kurdish officials in
Nineveh province tried to carry out just such a ballot-stuffing
scheme in last January's election." He describes how the US
was dependent on Kurdish militia to deliver ballots resulting in
ballots being denied to non-Kurdish areas as well as massive ballot
stuffing resulting in the election of Kurdish officials.
Iraq's
Independent Electoral Commission ordered an audit of "unusually
high" results in certain governorates, but added that such
"anomalies" did not imply fraud or wrongdoing. Early numbers
from the Associated Press which aren't endorsed by the Electoral
Commission showed almost twice as many "yes" votes for
the constitution as the total number of voters in January's elections
for the National Assembly. Late on Monday, the commission said a
final vote count, which had been expected by the end of this week,
would be delayed a few days in order to "recheck, compare and
audit" results. Poll officials said tallies of more than 90
per cent either for or against the document would be subjected to
special scrutiny.
Driving
doubts are results that do not pass the straight face test. In Ninevah
initial
reports claimed 75 percent favored the Constitution. This is
a majority Sunni Province. Making it less believable were the results
in neighboring province, Salaheddin,
were 71 percent were voting against the Constitution. The two provinces
are similar, both with Sunni Arab majorities.
In
some jurisdictions press reports indicate 99 percent support for
the Constitution – numbers so astounding that they are reminiscent
of the votes in favor of Saddam Hussein in previous Iraqi elections!
The
questions about whether there was vote fraud are serious, but will
probably not be resolved to the satisfaction of many. As a result
Sunni's are likely to discount the vote and the violence is unlikely
to abate. Time
reports some Sunni views: "We have proved we are against the
constitution," said Mishaan al-Jubouri, a Sunni legislator
from the Liberation and Reconciliation Party. "The Sunni Arabs
will reject this constitution totally."
"It
will be very difficult to convince people to come back to the political
process," said Saleh Mutlaq, a member of the National Dialogue
Council, a Sunni group that strongly opposed the constitution. "People
will be disappointed that their voices mean nothing." That
will be bad for Iraq, "and for the people occupying it,"
he added ominously.
Ratifying
this constitution was more important to the Bush agenda than to
Iraqis. It was conducted on a U.S. timetable, not an Iraqi timetable.
Yet, in the end, it will not solve the Bush Administration's problems
– in fact it will make them worse.
Sadly,
the vote on the Iraqi Constitution, whose legitimacy was already
a problem because it was conducted without any international monitors,
changes were being made up until the last days before the vote and
many Iraqis did not even see the document they voted on, is now
been made worse by the questions about whether the vote was fixed
to meet U.S. needs. In the future, Iraqis will see that they have
given up their oil wealth, their national identity and their secular
government based on the very fragile foundation of a potentially
fraudulent vote.
October
21, 2005
Kevin
Zeese [send him mail]
Director of Democracy Rising
visited Camp Casey in Crawford, TX on August 27. You can comment
on this article by visiting
the blog.
Copyright
2005 Kevin Zeese
Kevin
Zeese Archives
|