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KurdistanObserver.com
New York Times Once Again Sides with
Nazi-Minded Arab Baathists
An Incendiary Threat in Iraq
Jan 12, 2006
New York Times
Iraq's most powerful Shiite politician has just
dealt a huge blow to American-backed efforts to avoid civil war through the
creation of a new, nationally inclusive constitutional order. That leader, Abdul
Aziz al-Hakim, leader of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, has
turned his back on the crucial pledge, made before last October's constitutional
referendum, that the new charter would be open to substantial amendment by the
newly elected Parliament. Instead, Mr. Hakim, who runs the dominant,
Iranian-supported fundamentalist party, now says no broad changes should be
made. In particular, he defends the current provisions allowing substantial
autonomy for the oil-rich Shiite southeast.
The vote count from last month's parliamentary
election is not yet complete. But it is already certain that the Shiite
religious alliance, in which Mr. Hakim is the most important leader, will hold
enough seats to block any constitutional changes it doesn't like. The only
recourse is to persuade Mr. Hakim to respect that earlier pledge.
Mr. Hakim's latest position is a prescription
for a national breakup and an endless civil war. It is also a provocative
challenge to Washington, which helped broker the original promise of significant
constitutional changes. On the basis of that promise, Sunni voters turned out in
large numbers, both for the constitutional referendum and for last month's
parliamentary vote. Drawing Sunni voters into democratic politics is vital to
creating the stable, peaceful Iraq that President Bush has declared to be the
precondition for an American military withdrawal. The most unacceptable defect
of the new constitution for Sunnis is its provision for radically decentralizing
national political and economic power, dispersing it to separate regions.
In a quirk of geology, most of Iraq's known oil
deposits lie under provinces dominated by Shiites or Kurds, while the Sunni
provinces of the west and north are resource-poor and landlocked. Iraq as a
whole is rich enough to support all of its people relatively comfortably. But a
radically decentralized Iraq would leave the Sunnis impoverished, aggrieved and
desperate, driving them into the arms of radical Sunni groups in neighboring
lands.
Although Sunnis are a minority in Iraq, they
are an overwhelming majority in the Arab world. An irreconcilable split between
Iraq's Shiites and Sunnis would leave the Shiites even more dependent than they
are now on Iran and American troops.
Constitutional changes are needed in other
areas as well, especially in regard to women's rights and the overly broad
prohibitions against former members of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party. But
decentralization is the most dangerously explosive issue right now. Mr. Hakim
seems perversely determined to inflame it. |