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Iraq
Talabani: We're close to a coalition
By wire services
Published January 8, 2006
BAGHDAD - Iraq's fractious political groups could form a coalition government within weeks, the country's president said Saturday, as U.S. officials have increased postelection contacts with disaffected Sunni Arabs linked to the insurgency.
Jalal Talabani, Iraq's Kurdish president, offered a time frame on the formation of a government after meeting with visiting British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who said Iraqis remain optimistic about their future despite a violent week that saw nearly 200 people killed in two days, including 11 U.S. troops.
In an effort to help draw Sunni Arabs into the political process as a way to dampen the violence, U.S. officials for months have been communicating directly or through channels with members of the disaffected minority connected to the insurgency.
Meeting with Straw in Baghdad, Talabani said Shiite, Sunni Arab and Kurdish political groups had agreed in principle on a national unity government that could be formed within a few weeks. Western diplomats in Baghdad have speculated that a government could be in place by the second half of February.
"Everyone is expecting to have it as soon as possible, but you know the devil is in the details," Talabani said.
He said it should be easier to form a new government than it was after the Jan. 30 elections last year, when it took nearly three months. "We are expecting within weeks, God willing, we will be able to form the government."
Talabani and other Kurdish leaders met over the New Year's holiday with Sunni Arab and Shiite political leaders. The meetings in northern Irbil helped shape agreement on the general outlines of a broad-based coalition government.
Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, a member of the Shiite Alliance and head of the Dawa party, said in a separate meeting with Straw that the Shiite "alliance and the coalition of Kurdistan and the other tickets, fortunately, are keen to make a national unity government. That common feeling will make the process easier."
Earlier Straw said the situation in Iraq remained violent but its politicians were optimistic.
"I was trying to avoid any kind of pretense about the situation here in Iraq," Straw told BBC radio. "It is very difficult. People are being killed by terrorism."
Violence was greatly diminished on Saturday. Four people were killed in attacks around the country, and police found the bodies of four women - blindfolded and handcuffed - who apparently had been shot to death in Baghdad, officials said.
Almost 200 people were killed in attacks on Wednesday and Thursday.
Thousands of Shiites also demonstrated against the wave of bloodshed and what they claimed was American backing for Sunni Arab politicians in Baghdad's Sadr City slum on Friday.
Final results from the elections could be released this week and could be fully certified by the end of the month after any appeals are heard. Some Sunni Arabs have protested that the vote was tainted by fraud.
The results are expected to show the religious Shiite United Iraqi Alliance with a strong lead. The Shiites will, however, need to form a coalition government with support from Kurdish and Sunni Arab political groups.
The rallies and threats by Iraq's largest Shiite religious party to react with force if the militant attacks do not stop renewed fears that paramilitary militias would take to the streets and carry out reprisals.
Sunni Arabs have complained that often brutal methods used by Interior Ministry forces already have pushed Iraq to the brink of sectarian war. In response, those forces were reined in after pressure by U.S. officials to prevent abuses of Sunni Arabs.
Western officials say it's important for Iraqi forces working to establish security to be mindful of the political impact their operations can have.
Some Sunni political leaders upset over the alleged abuses by Interior Ministry security forces, which are mostly composed of Shiites, have discussed setting up neighborhood self-defense forces in response, the Western diplomat said.
A spokesman for the Iraqi Islamic Party, the biggest Sunni Arab political party, said neighborhood defense forces were only an idea that has been brought up during discussions over how to protect the minority.
Delegation warns of diminishing support
BAGHDAD - A Midwestern Congressional delegation had a blunt assessment Saturday for Iraq's political leaders: Shape up, or America will ship out.
The continued U.S. commitment to Iraq is becoming a tougher sell at home, said the delegation of four lawmakers, and unless Iraqis start showing visible signs of progress by creating a broad-based government and security forces inclusive of all of Iraq's ethnic and sectarian groups, Americans will lose patience, they said.
"It's going to be hard to convince American taxpayers to pour water into a leaky bucket," said Sen. Barack Obama, the first-term Illinois senator, speaking briefly with a small group of Western reporters inside Saddam Hussein's Republican Palace, now used as an annex for the U.S. Embassy. Obama, Sen. Christopher "Kit" Bond, R-Mo., Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., and Rep. Harold Ford, D-Tenn., arrived in Iraq on Saturday on a whirlwind trip that included meetings with American intelligence and reconstruction specialists and Iraqi election officials in the capital's U.S.-protected Green Zone as well as visits Sunday to troops in outlying provinces. They were not scheduled to speak directly to Iraqi political leaders.
Echoing similar exhortations put to Iraqi leaders in recent days by Bush administration officials, the lawmakers said that their constituents were proud of America's accomplishments in Iraq but loathe to commit further money and troops if the Iraqi government elected last month did not draw in all the country ethnic and political factions.
U.S. journalist kidnapped
BAGHDAD - Gunmen kidnapped a female American journalist and killed her Iraqi translator Saturday in western Baghdad, an Interior Ministry official said.
Maj. Falah Mohamadawi said the translator told police before he died that the abduction took place when he and the journalist were heading to meet Adnan al-Dulaimi, head of the Sunni Arab Iraqi Accordance Front, in the Adel section of the city.
The neighborhood is dominated by Sunni Arabs and considered one of toughest in Baghdad.
According to Samir Najim, a guard at Dulaimi's office, three armed men in a red Opel four-sedan intercepted the journalist's car and shot the translator before taking her in their car and driving away. The kidnapping took place about 100 yards from Dulaimi's office.
Insurgents have kidnapped more than 250 foreigners in the past two years, aiming to force U.S.-led troops to leave Iraq or prevent Arab nations from strengthening their ties with the Baghdad government.
[Last modified January 8, 2006, 00:45:14]
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