|
U.S. weighs changes as Iraqis
press for power shift
Washington -
Iraq's U.S. Governor Paul Bremer consulted with President Bush on
Friday as the United States acted to smooth over a dispute with Iraq's
top Shi'ite Muslim cleric on Friday, saying it was willing to make
changes to its plan to hand political power to Iraqis.
Shifting policy in the face of
growing opposition among Iraq's majority Shi'ites to its handover
plan, the Bush administration also said it was eager for the United
Nations to return to Iraq to help with the planned transition.
Iraq's most revered Shi'ite cleric,
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, has refused to support the U.S. plan for
regional caucuses to select a transitional assembly that will pick an
interim government for sovereignty by July and demanded direct
elections.
"These are questions that, obviously,
need to be looked at," the U.S. governor, Paul Bremer, said after
meeting Bush. But he expressed "doubts" about the demand for direct
elections before the transfer of power on June 30.
"We're intending to stick to the
timeline that we've laid out" -- for the transfer of power on June 30
and direct elections in 2005," Bremer told reporters.
Senior administration officials said
they were open to changes, within that timeline, to address Iraqi
concerns.
"We are willing to discuss
refinements or improvements," said White House spokesman Scott
McClellan.
NOT FEASIBLE
The United States and United Nations
share the view that a lack of electoral registers and polling laws
mean it is not feasible to hold elections before an Iraqi transitional
government takes power.
"We have doubts -- as does the
secretary-general -- that elections can in fact be called in the time
frame of the return of sovereignty to the Iraqi people on June 30,"
said Bremer. He is due to meet with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan
on Monday and is expected to ask him to send a U.N. political
fact-finding team to Iraq.
The United States went to war in Iraq
without the backing of the U.N. Security Council and had long resisted
a wider U.N. role in postwar Iraq. Now the Bush administration wants
to persuade the United Nations to return to Iraq to oversee the
handover, hoping this will convince Iraqis to support it.
Diplomats at the United Nations said
Washington would like to see the United Nations play an advisory role
and perhaps certify the fairness of the transition afterward.
Annan
pulled U.N. international staff out of Iraq last year after suicide
bomb attacks on the U.N.'s Baghdad headquarters.
Sistani
has declared the U.S. plan will not produce a government acceptable to
Iraqis and warned of more political tension and violence if elections
are not held soon.
Tens of thousands of Shi'ites,
flexing their political muscle after three decades of repression under
Saddam Hussein, marched through the southern city of Basra on Thursday
to chants of "No to America."
SHI'ITE
MAJORITY
In the Shi'ite holy city of Najaf,
many supported Sistani's call. "It's natural to have a Shi'ite
government because we are the majority," said Turk Abbas, an elderly
blanket seller.
Sistani's
stance could turn Shi'ites against Washington as U.S.-led forces
battle guerrillas in minority Sunni Muslim areas.
Meanwhile, Turkey's powerful military
warned that a federation in Iraq based on ethnic lines -- which would
likely give autonomy to the Kurds -- would result in bloodshed.
"If there is a federal structure in
Iraq on an ethnic basis, the future will be very difficult and
bloody," Turkish Gen. Ilker Basbug said in Ankara.
Pressure from the Kurds for control
over more territory in northern Iraq and opposition from Sunni Muslims
as well as NATO-member Turkey have further complicated U.S. plans.
In Iraq, the U.S. military said it
was investigating reports of detainees being abused at one of its
detention centers, but gave no details of the allegations.
The United States is holding an
estimated 9,500 detainees in Iraq on security grounds. Many others
have been detained and released since Saddam was ousted last April.
Since the start of the war in March,
343 U.S. soldiers have been killed in action in Iraq, 228 of them in
guerrilla attacks since Bush said major combat ended in May. Including
non-combat deaths, the U.S. toll stands at 496. --
Associated Press
Brudirect.com
News
|