From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. Tells Shiite Bloc It Opposes Jafari as Premier
In
Washington's most overt effort to influence who will lead Iraq, the
ambassador relays a 'personal message' from President Bush.
By Richard Boudreaux
Times Staff Writer
March 29, 2006
BAGHDAD — In an effort to break a deadlock in forming Iraq's new
government, the Bush administration has notified the leading Shiite
Muslim alliance that it opposes the nomination of Prime Minister
Ibrahim Jafari for another term in office, a U.S. official and Shiite
politician said Tuesday.
The
message from the White House relayed by the U.S. ambassador comes amid
growing strain on relations between the United States and the Shiite
bloc that heads Iraq's transitional administration. It is the most
overt U.S. bid thus far to engineer the choice of a less divisive
leader for a four-year government.
Jafari's nomination six weeks
ago elicited fierce opposition from Sunni Arab, Kurdish and secular
parties represented in the parliament elected Dec. 15. U.S. officials
say the wrangling has frustrated Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad's efforts
to broker the formation of a unity government and has created a power
vacuum in which sectarian violence is flourishing.
Jafari, a
religious scholar with close ties to Iran, has been widely criticized
for failing to defeat the Sunni Muslim-led insurgency and for allowing
Shiite sectarian militias to operate death squads within the police
force. His tenure has seen a decline in oil production and a lag in
reconstruction efforts.
On Saturday the ambassador delivered
what he called a "personal message" from President Bush to Abdelaziz
Hakim, the Shiite alliance leader, and asked that it be relayed to
Jafari, according to an advisor to Hakim who was present at the meeting.
"The
message from Bush is that the United States prefers a prime minister
other than Dr. Jafari, a leader who is more acceptable to all political
factions and who does not have an unsuccessful record in running the
country," said the advisor, Ridha Taqi.
A U.S. official who
spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed that Khalilzad had asked
Hakim to seek the withdrawal of Jafari's candidacy.
U.S. Embassy
spokeswoman Elizabeth Colton confirmed that Khalilzad met Saturday with
Hakim, but said she was unaware of any message from the White House.
She said it was not U.S. policy to interfere in the choice of
government officials here.
"This is an Iraqi decision," she said.
A
Shiite politician close to the prime minister, Haider Abadi, said
Jafari was aware of the message but had not been formally notified.
"It
is not a friendly message," Abadi said. "The ambassador is creating an
atmosphere of rejection against Dr. Jafari by saying the United States
cannot work with him. That only discourages the Sunnis and other
political factions from being open to compromise."
For weeks,
Khalilzad and other U.S. officials have been stressing the need for
leaders who can bridge Iraq's deep sectarian and ethnic divides, build
faith in a national army and police force, and stabilize the country,
allowing the United States to start withdrawing troops.
Shiites
in the government have grown increasingly irritated with Khalilzad's
public calls to disband the militias and bring Sunnis into the next
government. Last month, Hakim said the ambassador's efforts left the
impression of a bias against Shiites and had contributed to the
insurgent bombing of a major Shiite shrine in Samarra.
Tensions
reached a crisis level this week after special forces of the Iraqi
army, which is led by the Sunni defense minister, and U.S. military
advisors killed at least 16 people in a raid on a Shiite neighborhood
in Baghdad. American military officers said the raid smashed a
kidnapping gang operating from an office complex, recovered a large
cache of weapons and freed a hostage. Shiite political leaders gave a
different account, saying that the operation targeted a mosque and that
unarmed worshipers were among the victims.
The Shiite coalition reacted by saying it would back out of talks to
form a government.
The
U.S. official said the Bush administration was concerned that the raid
and the Samarra bombing had drawn disparate elements of the Shiite
alliance closer together, making it more difficult to persuade them to
reconsider Jafari's nomination. The official said the administration
was aware that the more overt push to quash Jafari's candidacy might
backfire and solidify that resistance.
Salam Maliki, a Shiite
member of parliament, told reporters Tuesday: "The nominee is still
Jafari. We do not accept any interference by the United States or any
other foreign body."
Other members of the alliance said
Jafari's nomination was still being debated. In an interview Monday
with CNN, Hakim said a final decision "will need some discussion, and
in a little while the picture will be much clearer." Under the Iraqi
Constitution, the alliance is entitled to nominate a prime minister
because it holds the most seats in parliament — 130 of 275.
But it takes a two-thirds vote to ratify members of the government, so
the Shiites need support from other parties.
Jafari
won his coalition's nomination last month by one vote among the 130
cast in a secret ballot by the alliance's members of parliament,
beating Adel Abdul Mahdi, a candidate preferred by Washington.
In
U.S.-guided talks on forming a government, other political blocs have
proposed that the alliance let parliament choose a prime minister from
among Jafari, Mahdi and potentially a third Shiite candidate. The
Shiite alliance has rejected that idea.
After their walkout
Monday, Shiite negotiators returned to the talks Tuesday but failed to
reach an agreement with other parties over who would control the armed
forces and police in the new government.
Mahmoud Othman, a
Kurdish negotiator, said Sunni parties insisted that all security
forces be controlled by a Sunni deputy prime minister supervised by the
Shiite prime minister.
"But the Shiites don't want the Sunnis to share any of that control,"
Othman said.
Two
dozen people were reported killed or found dead Tuesday in sectarian
violence. Police in Baghdad discovered the bodies of 17 men who had
been handcuffed and shot in the head; most had been dumped under a
bridge.
The U.S. military reported the deaths of two American
soldiers. One was shot south of Baghdad. The other was killed when his
convoy struck a roadside bomb near Habbaniya, west of the capital. They
were not immediately identified.
In the biggest wave of
kidnappings in a month, masked gunmen stormed a currency exchange house
and two electronics shops in Baghdad within 30 minutes, dragged off 24
Iraqis and stole tens of thousands of dollars in cash, police said. The
kidnappers in two of the raids wore military uniforms.
Times staff writers Raheem Salman in Baghdad and
Paul Richter in Washington contributed to this report.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times