[NYTr] Iraqi Prime Minister Assails Hillary and Levin
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Aug 27 16:02:53 EDT 2007
The New York Times - Aug 27, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/27/world/middleeast/27iraq.html
Iraqi Prime Minister Assails Democratic Critics
By James Glanz
Baghdad,- Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki on Sunday extended his
tongue-lashing of foreign politicians who have questioned his
government, saying that Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and Carl Levin
needed to "start making sense again" after the senators, both
Democrats, called for his ouster.
Mr. Maliki, who previously reacted with anger to President Bush's
criticism of the Iraqi government's lack of political progress, also
lashed out at the French foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner, who called
for Mr. Maliki to be replaced in an interview that appeared on the
Newsweek Web site on Sunday.
But Mr. Maliki appeared to reach a new level of stridency with his
reply to Senator Clinton, of New York, and Senator Levin, of Michigan.
In remarks in a news briefing that referred to the senators by name,
Mr. Maliki said they had spoken "as if Iraq is one of their cities."
"Iraq is a sovereign country, and we will not allow anyone to talk
about it as if it belongs to this country or that," Mr. Maliki said. He
added a phrase that could be translated as indicating that the senators
ought to make sense again or should return to a logical path.
Later in the day, Mr. Maliki appeared to have calmed down as he went
through a series of meetings and participated in a joint statement of
broad political unity by two major Kurdish parties, two Shiite parties,
including his Dawa Party, and a bloc led by Vice President Tariq
al-Hashemi, a Sunni.
The White House, eager for signs of progress, welcomed the agreement. A
spokeswoman, Emily A. Lawrimore, said the leaders' decision was "an
important symbol of their commitment to work together for the benefit
of all Iraqis."
In advance of a report on progress in Iraq by the United States
ambassador, Ryan C. Crocker, and the American commander in Iraq, Gen.
David H. Petraeus, the statement appeared tailored to show that steps
toward political unity had been taken.
The report by Mr. Crocker and General Petraeus is widely expected to
point to some advances on security and the economy, partly as a result
of an American troop increase. But the fractious government has made
little progress in crucial areas like laws regulating the development
of Iraq's oil resources and governing the sharing of oil revenues.
But Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, a Kurd, who was at the
multiparty talks, said that he thought the participants had negotiated
the statement in good faith.
"I hope that this agreement offers us an opportunity to move beyond the
political crisis that has afflicted the country," Mr. Salih said. "I
would consider this an important step forward, but we have to admit
that we have more work to do."
Mr. Crocker was at the meeting of officials pushing along an agreement,
Mr. Salih said.
In his earlier news briefing, Mr. Maliki also gave very qualified
support to another initiative he has been pressed to accept: bringing
former members of the Baath Party of Saddam Hussein back into the
government.
"The doors are open for all the politicians who don't call for violence
and the use of weapons against the government," Mr. Maliki said.
"But some people want to bring back the old regime," he added. "They
want to bring back the time when the minority governed the majority.
This time is past, and no one can do anything outside the political
process."
Still, despite the promising signs on Sunday, Iraq's political process
remains all but completely stalled. And Mr. Maliki's government has been
gravely weakened by major defections in the past few weeks. In the most
recent, the secular political alliance Iraqiya, led by former Prime
Minister Ayad Allawi, withdrew from the government on Friday.
In an interview on Sunday on CNN's "Late Edition," Mr. Allawi said his
alliance had "lost our faith in the capability of the current
government of salvaging the country and moving forward."
"I don't see that we are getting closer to reconciliation," he said. "I
don't see that we are getting closer to getting rid of militias. I am
not seeing that we are getting closer to having assertive policies,
foreign policies, which would not allow Iran to intervene in Iraqi
affairs."
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