The New York Sun
September 16, 2003
Chalabi's Challenge

Tension between the leaders of free Iraq and American officials, 
brewing for some time now, is about to come to a boil over a 
power struggle. The free Iraqis, working with minimal authority 
under the L. Paul Bremer-appointed Governing Council, are 
clamoring for more control over their own affairs. The Washington 
Post reported yesterday that the leader of the Iraqi National 
Congress and current president of Iraq,Ahmad Chalabi, said that 
the restoration of sovereignty to Iraq "would make the Americans 
look like liberators again" because "Iraqi people don't understand 
the logic of occupation." He also said more control of Iraq by Iraqis 
would reduce attacks against American troops.

That view of Iraqi governance seems to put Mr. Chalabi at odds yet 
again with Secretary of State Powell.The doubting Thomas when it 
comes to democratizing the Arab world, Mr. Powell was quoted 
over the weekend as warning against accelerating the transfer of 
more power to the Iraqis, saying that "it's necessary " for America 
to continue "hanging on" and that it would be a mistake "to push 
this process too quickly."

Mr. Powell and the State Department and have found themselves 
at loggerheads with Mr. Chalabi on an array of important issues. 
Foggy Bottom has been trying to stymie the efforts the Iraqi 
democrats for years. But as this war goes on, Mr. Chalabi has 
been looking more credible with every passing week. He been 
calling for the creation of an Iraqiled security force to keep the 
peace long before the coalition finally took note and did so.

That the Iraqis want more control over their own affairs may seem 
petty, even naive, or, conversely an attempt at a power grab by 
opportunistic politicians.But Mr.Chalabi and his democratic allies 
have long argued for a quick transition stemming from the belief 
that there should be no gap in Iraqi sovereignty. They have warned 
for years that a prolonged occupation could be problematic. It's not 
surprising that Iraqis know Iraq better than anyone else and that 
they are best equipped to solve its problems.

"The United states should not keep missing opportunities to 
become more popular in Iraq," the director of the INC's research 
bureau, Nibras Kazimi, told the Sun last night. "The daily grind of 
the occupation is very unpopular. Iraqis are saying 'we can handle 
it,' and the U.S. should trust us if they're asking us to reciprocate."

We will not win the war on terror without allies, and in Iraq we have 
Muslim and Arab allies ready to join us in our fight.The logic of 
working with them and bolstering Americanallied advocates of 
Iraqi democracy strikes us as overwhelming. The State 
Department has been dragging its feet on this issue almost from 
the day Congress passed and President Clinton signed the Iraq 
Liberation Act of 1998, and it is long past time to put an end to the 
internecine squabbles that have given rise to that kind of 
recalcitrance. The Free Iraqi movement is still,as it has been all 
along, America's best hope in a war that was aimed, after all, at 
liberating the country. 

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