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Make or Break for the Iraqi Constitution,
By John Hulsman, Ph.D.
25.8.2005
By John Hulsman, Ph.D., and Nile Gardiner, Ph.D.
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Heritage Foundation: At the end of Monday’s
cliffhanger negotiations, Iraqi representatives set
a new and final deadline of August 25, 2005, for
reaching agreement on the country’s new
constitution. The process has unsurprisingly been
contentious from the start, as long-standing
differences of opinion over such important issues as
federalism, Islamic (Sharia) law, women’s rights,
and the distribution of oil proceeds have kept the
three major ethnic and religious groups—the Shia
Arabs, Sunni Arabs, and Kurds—from coming to terms.
If agreement is not reached in the interim
parliament, the entire constitutional edifice will
come crashing down, with new elections being
necessary. This is the make or break hour for Iraqi
self-governance. The United States, without
dictating a settlement, must galvanize Iraq’s
leaders to reach agreement on the most important
issue – federalism.
A decentralized federal political system offers the
best means of assuring local autonomy, protection
against the return of a tyrannical central
government, a fair share in the political settlement
in Iraq, and an equitable disbursement of Iraq’s oil
and tax revenues. However, this scenario is
threatened by Sunni intransigence over federalism.
Beyond their constitutional ability to derail the
final document on October 15, lack of Sunni
political involvement imperils the very idea of a
self-sustaining Iraqi democracy. The Sunni
leadership fear federalism could tear Iraq apart; in
reality, it is far more likely that their
obstructionism will accomplish this.
The ushering in of Iraq’s new constitution, by any
measure a staggering political achievement, should
not herald the end of America’s commitment to the
recently liberated country. The threat of more
violence from Sunni insurgents and their al-Qaeda
jihadist cohorts should be met with a renewed
commitment by the Bush Administration to aggressive
military operations to combat terrorism in Iraq. If
necessary in the near term, the United States should
deploy even more forces to the Sunni heartlands in
order to ensure that the terrorists do not succeed
in derailing the democratic process. Major campaigns
may need to be launched against insurgent-held
strongholds such as Haditha. A sustained effort must
be made to either capture or kill Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
the leader of al Qaeda forces in the country. This
tough military response must dovetail with political
efforts to help the Iraqis help themselves.
The Sunnis, who make up just 20 percent of Iraq’s 26
million people and dominated the brutal Baathist
regime of Saddam Hussein, should not be permitted to
block the efforts of Shias and Kurds to forge ahead
with a federal-based constitution. Instead it is
vital that their leadership reach a consensus with
the other two groups if Iraq is to become
self-sustaining. The Sunnis must accept that their
era of dominance is over, and they must choose
whether to participate in the new Iraq or be
completely marginalized from the political process.
John Hulsman, Ph.D., is Research Fellow in European
Affairs, and Nile Gardiner Ph.D. is Fellow in
Anglo-American Security Policy, in the Douglas and
Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy of the
Shelby and Kathryn Cullom Davis Institute for
International Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
www.krg.org
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