"...the only avenue left open to them is to continue their guerilla
war against the Americans and the Iraqi regime."

http://www.debka.com/article.php?aid=1126

Sunni Disillusion with Iraqi Election Threatens to Fuel Guerilla War

DEBKAfile Special Report

December 27, 2005, 3:20 PM (GMT+02:00)

The decision by the Iraqi Supreme Court to disqualify 90 delegates who
were elected to parliament on December 15, most of them Sunni Muslims,
because they were once members of the Baath Party, echoes the decision
reached in the middle of 2003 by Paul Bremer, the first US
administrator for Iraq.

At that time, Bremer, who was new to the job, ruled that all members
of Saddam Hussein’s Baath Party and officers and sergeants of his
armed forces - especially if they were also members of the Baath Party
(had they not been, they would not have been considered for
promotions) - would not be eligible for posts in the new regime or the
new army to be established.

Bremer’s ruling was considered the second worst mistake the Bush
administration made in Iraq, next to defense secretary Donald
Rumsfeld’s decision â€" contrary to the view of most US military experts
â€" that 150,000 troops would be sufficient to dismantle Saddam’s regime
and bring Iraq under control.

This ruling condemned many thousands of former Iraqi officers and
soldiers to choosing between a life of poverty and deprivation for
themselves and their families and their only alternative: to join the
Sunni Muslim guerilla war - with the guarantee of a monthly paycheck
equal to their wages from Saddam’s regime.

Most of them chose the latter, giving the leaders of the guerilla war
against the Americans an infusion of professional and experienced
manpower.

The Iraqi parliament has 275 deputies. The disqualification of 90
elected members â€" most of them Sunnis and secular â€" even before the
votes were counted and the results made public - will have two
immediate consequences: approximately 30 percent of the democratically
elected parliament will be prevented from taking their seats, leading
the Sunnis to total disenchantment with the democratic election
process. They will seize on this setback as further proof that
whatever they do, including massive participation in the elections,
they will never be admitted to a position of influence within the
Shite-Kurdish regime in Baghdad.

Therefore, they will reason, the only avenue left open to them is to
continue their guerilla war against the Americans and the Iraqi regime.

In recent days, this inclination has gained favor among the Sunnis.
They are increasingly suspicious that the general election was rigged
with the help of Iranian intelligence agents to boost the Shiite share
of the vote beyond its close to 60 percent of the population.

Another effect could be closer cooperation between radical Sunnis and
Abu Musab al Zarqawi’s al Qaida in Iraq, which has maintained all
along that Sunni participation in the new political process is a
delusion that will only lead to more repression.

On December 25, the bullet-ridden body of a young Sunni Muslim, Qusay
Salahaddin, was found in Mosul. As the head of the local student
union, he led last week’s demonstrations against the alleged voter
fraud in the parliamentary elections. When he was abducted on December
22, he managed to reach his cell phone and shout to his friends that
he was in the hands of the peshmerga , the Kurdish militia, and they
were going to kill him for his impudence in raising charges of voter
fraud.

The New York Times , in its lead editorial December 27, advised the
Sunnis to reconcile themselves to their limited influence in
parliament since they represented no more than 20 percent of the
population. Most Sunnis do not read The New York Times, but they can
count: the Kurds, who represent no more than 18 percent of the
population, scored much better than they; their candidates were not
disqualified and no one kidnapped and killed Kurds who complained
about forged ballots.

One exception is the Kurdish Bahram Salah, a former Iraqi deputy prime
minister and chief election strategist for Iyyad Alawi’s secular
alliance. He is speaking openly of rigged election results.

The talk coming out of Washington these days is resigned: we will we
have to reconcile ourselves to a kind of “sectarian democracy”
prevailing in Iraq in the next few years, official sources are saying.
In practical terms, this assessment reduces the prospects of an early
US military withdrawal from Iraq amid a corresponding expectation of a
heightened Sunni insurgency. 





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