David Rosenberg
Baghdad, Iraq
Less than nine years after U.S. troops toppled Saddam Hussein with the stated goal of turning Iraq into a Western-friendly democracy, the country's prime minister, Nouri Al-Maliki, is seeking to position himself as an autocrat at the head of a Shiite regime, analysts and political rivals warn.
In the two weeks since the last American troops departed, Iraq has been gripped by a coalition crisis that threatens the delicate balance between Al-Maliki and his Sunni partners, while in the streets a spate of bombings has reignited fears of a new round of bloody sectarian fighting like the one in 2006 -2007 that took tens of thousands of lives.
"Al-Maliki is in conflict with both Sunnis and Shiites as he is trying to impose himself as a strongman in Iraq," Reidar Visser, editor of the Iraq-focused website www.historiae.org, told The Media Line. "The bombers are certainly exploiting the delicate political situation."
The crisis is an embarrassment to the Obama administration, which hosted Al-Maliki in Washington earlier this month amid praise for Iraq's nascent democracy and economic prospects.
But for Iraq the stakes are considerably bigger. The prime minister's bid for power could saddle Iraq with a new despot at a time when the rest of the region is lurching toward democracy. Alternatively, Al-Maliki's plan could backfire and push the country into anarchy.
Al-Maliki himself fomented the government crisis just as the last U.S. troops were heading out of the country in mid-December by accusing a Sunni coalition partner, Vice President Tariq Al-Hashemi, of links to terrorism and by asking parliament to back his dismissing a second, Deputy Prime Minister Saleh Al-Mutlak. Al-Hashemi has taken refuge in the semi-autonomous Kurdish zone and has called for new elections.
Meanwhile, last Thursday at least 65 people were killed in a series of bombings. An Al-Qaida-affiliated organization took responsibility for the attacks in what analysts say is an attempt to renew sectarian fighting. On Monday of this week, a suicide bomber exploded his car outside the Interior Ministry, killing at least five people.
In public, Al-Maliki remains supportive of democracy and is critical of the sectarian and ethnic divides that have pitted Iraq's Sunni and Shiite Muslim populations against each other and led the ethnic Kurds to set up a semi-governing region of their own in the north.
"It is only normal that we should be facing problems. We don't have a magic wand for establishing democracy and for convincing people that there is a new regime and to forget the old mentality, to convince people who still believe in the old sectarian or ethnic principles that the state should be based on democracy, elections," the prime minister said last week in a broadcast aired by the BBC.
"Some people are still revolting against this principle," he added. Many analysts and Iraqi politicians count Al-Maliki as among those who think Iraq cannot afford democracy. Among them are Ayad Allawi, Osama Al-Nujaifi and Rafe Al-Essawi - three leaders of the Sunni Iraqiya Party - who warned in a New York Times op-ed on Wednesday that Iraq is headed for authoritarian rule.
"The prize, for which so many American soldiers believed they were fighting, was a functioning democratic and nonsectarian state. But Iraq is now moving in the opposite direction — toward a sectarian autocracy that carries with it the threat of devastating civil war," they said.
So far, Al-Maliki's maneuvering has had just the exact opposite effect, spurring calls for new elections and encouraging those among the Sunnis who would like to follow the Kurdish path to autonomy. But during his brief political career he has displayed a talent for consolidating power.
Born into a middle class family from the small town of Hindiya, Al-Maliki spent most of his adult life as an exile in Iran; and in Syria as an official of the Shiite Al-Dawa Party. He returned to his homeland after the U.S. invasion in 2003, won a seat in the transitional National Assembly two years later and was elevated to the post of prime minister for the first time in 2006 as the country was plunging into violence.
At the time, he was not regarded as particularly ambitious politically and ready to work with country's Sunni minority, who had dominated Iraq during the Saddam years. But he proved tougher and less compromising than many, including the Bush administration, had expected. He quickly sent Iraqi troops into Basra, the country's second-largest city, to put down a rebellion by Muqtada Al-Sadr's militia and solidified his control over Al-Dawa.
Al-Dawa pulled in fewer votes than Iraqiya in 2010 elections, but Al-Maliki nevertheless emerged triumphant in lengthy coalition talks that followed, outmaneuvering his Sunni rivals to return to the prime minister's office. Since then he has only strengthened his position.
Although a complicated power-sharing agreement put the key Defense and Interior ministries under Iraqiya, Al-Maliki effectively runs both. Moreover, in the style of Middle East autocrats like Saddam or Syria's Bashar Al-Asad, Al-Maliki created a security force, Baghdad Operations Command, that answers to him personally.
He has used his control over the state budget to gain leverage with the judiciary and oversight agencies like the anti-graft Integrity Commission. Some Iraqi dailies have suggested that he might try to amend the constitution and introduce a presidential system that would rid of him of parliamentary oversight.
Al-Maliki has reportedly never been happy with the Shiite-Sunni coalition he leads and has talked about establishing what he calls "a political majority," meaning an exclusively Shiite government in its place.
Al-Maliki's behavior the past two weeks has drawn some complaints from his fellow Shiites, most notably a call this week from a faction of Sadrist lawmakers to dissolve parliament and hold elections. But most analysts have discounted that as tactical maneuvering and say Shiite fears of a Sunni resurgence will ensure they continue backing the prime minister.
"There are also sectarian aspects to the conflict because many Sunnis are now demanding federal regions on the pattern of the Kurdish model," said Visser, who is also an Iraq expert at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs. "The Shiites who are threatening Al-Maliki basically seem to be seeking a better deal from him for themselves."
Iraqi Parliament Speaker highlights Iraq's human rights violations
Baghdad, Iraq
Amidst the country's deteriorating political situation, Iraqi Parliament Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi on Monday spoke up against widespread human rights violations in Iraq.
"The human rights in Iraq have suffered massive violations by using violence against individuals and properties, random detention, mistreatment, poor judicial procedures and targeting innocent citizens from different factions," the Sunni speaker said in a televised address to Iraqi people.
He also slammed Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's opposition to create semi-autonomous regions. "No Iraqi has the right to violate a clear article in the constitution. We are looking forward to that all parties will respect the constitution, and will respond to the public opinion in every province that wants to establish a region, based on the willingness of its people whenever and wherever they want," Nujaifi said.
His comments came in the wake of an ongoing political dispute in the Sunni-backed bloc of Iraqia where Maliki wants to arrest Sunni Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi over terrorism charges.
Maliki also demanded Sunni deputy Salih al-Mutlak's sacking after the latter told a CNN interviewer that Maliki is a dictator and that he is worse than ex-Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
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