With the candidates' lists closed and Iraq seemingly set on an irreversible course toward elections on Jan. 30, a senior Western official with decades of Middle East experience cast about last Friday for the kind of optimistic forecast that the US and its allies have offered at every important juncture in 20 turbulent months since the toppling of former president Saddam Hussein.
The election, the official said, was the most ambitious democratic exercise ever attempted in an Arab country, one in which 14 million eligible Iraqis will choose from more than 7,700 candidates seeking seats in a provisional national assembly, 18 provincial councils and a regional Kurdish parliament. He invited comparisons with a clumsily rigged referendum two years ago, when Saddam declared himself re-elected president with 100 percent of his countrymen's 12 million votes.
Later, the official, guarded by the anonymity commonly demanded when reporters are briefed in the Green Zone command compound, slipped, momentarily, into a more candid assessment of the prospects for conducting a successful vote in a country beset by an increasingly brutal war and deep sectarian, religious and regional rivalries. The election, he said, was a "jungle of ambiguity" where hopes ride on a sea of uncertainties, not the least of them the degree of violence the voting will provoke.
Many of those most closely involved in organizing the elections, including Iraqis, Americans and officials in a small UN election assistance team, agree that the elections amount to a high-stakes gamble, one that could end the series of bitter reverses that have followed last year's invasion, but which could just as easily spiral into chaos with widespread insurgent attacks on candidates and polling stations, or end in a lopsided victory by Iranian-backed Shiite religious groups that the ethnic and religious minorities refuse to accept.
In the first 48 hours since the deadline for candidates to register last Wednesday, there has been little new evidence to support a particular outcome. The only rally so far was held on Friday at a Baghdad sports stadium, where 2,000 Communist Party supporters, their ranks decimated under Saddam, met to chant slogans that would have provoked executions before his downfall.
Otherwise, the only sign of an impending election in the capital has been giant posters showing the country's most powerful Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, and his recent decree declaring it a religious duty for all Shiites to vote.
One uncertainty is how much of a campaign there will be, at least in terms of normal, Western-style rallies and meet-the-voters politicking. Although the Communists made a bold start on Friday, other groups have made no secret of their concern not to expose their candidates to the bombs, ambushes and assassinations that have been the insurgents' stock-in-trade. When interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi began his campaign last Wednesday with an appearance with members of his slate at a Baghdad sports club, the Americans who form the core of his security team judged the risks so great that they ordered a large area of central Baghdad closed to traffic for several hours.
The empty streets at the height of the working day marked at least a symbolic success for the Sunni insurgents who have given notice of their intention to disrupt the polls. Just as much, they were a reminder of the residual power, even in an American prison near Baghdad airport, of Saddam, who US officials believe laid the groundwork for the insurgency before the invasion in March last year, by ordering the preparation of underground cells, the stashing of large amounts of money and the stocking of extensive weapons caches.
His legacy was injected into the campaign in another way on Saturday, when three of his closest associates, including Al Hassan al-Majid, known to Iraqis as Chemical Ali for his role in poison-gas attacks on Iraqi Kurds in the late 1980s, will make brief court appearances in Baghdad. Iraqi officials have ac-knowledged that the hearings, a step toward full-scale trials that are not expected to begin for many months, have been hastened under pressure from Allawi, who demanded in the fall that the trials of Saddam and his top lieutenants begin before the end of the year, apparently to harness whatever popular acclaim might derive from bringing the perpetrators of Iraq's grim past to book.
Allawi, chosen by the US to head the interim government, is fighting for every advantage in what many Iraqis believe to be an uphill struggle. The early election favorite, many Iraqis believe, is a coalition of Shiite religious parties, the United Iraqi Alliance, that announced its slate last week. That group, led by men who forged strong ties to Iran's ruling ayatollahs during long exile under Saddam, has the advantage of Iraq's Shiite majority, estimated at about 60 percent of the country's 25 million people, and of the apparent patronage of al-Sistani, the country's most powerful Shiite cleric.
Added to these strengths, the religious alliance, like other Shiite groups, could find its weight in the 275-seat provisional assembly boosted, under a system that will apportion seats in accordance with each slate's percentage of the national vote, by an election boycott among Sunnis who account for about 20 percent of the population. A vociferous Sunni religious group, the Muslim Clerics Association, which has backed the insurgents, has renewed its calls for a boycott in the wake of last month's US military offensive in Fallujah, and the intensity of the war in other Sunni heartland areas south, north and west of Baghdad has raised doubts about the practicality of conducting polls, even assuming that significant numbers of Sunnis want to vote.
The Shiite groups that have set aside rivalries to join the religious alliance have projected confidence, but Western officials caution against assumptions about where votes will go. For one thing, they say, voter preferences could be widely dispersed. According to Iraq's election commission, the alliance is one of nine broad political coalitions seeking seats, along with 73 individual parties and 27 stand-alone candidates.
Election rules gave registered candidates until Monday to reconfigure alliances or to forge new ones, but as matters stand, Iraqi voters, each with a single ballot in the national poll, will have 109 potential choices.
The Western official who briefed reporters on Friday said opinion polls conducted for the US occupation authority during its 15 months in power, and for the interim government since it took office in June, had shown that only a small
minority of Iraqis polled, about 15 percent, expressed a preference for any political group. Added to this, the official said, many parties and individuals who have registered for the election are making their first appearance on the political scene.
"None of these parties knows what it will be bringing to the table in terms of political strength," he said.
Another unknown, the official said, was the role of al-Sistani, whose closest aides have said that he favors no party or alliance, only that he wants every Shiite to vote. While this appeared to run against the ayatollah's role in bringing the alliance together, the official said, the religious parties would have to step carefully to avoid alienating voters by giving them the impression that they were being stampeded into the alliance's camp, or, politically more risky, that they were being manipulated by groups influenced by Iran.
"I know a lot of Shiite clerics who are very emphatic that they are not some kind of stalking horse for an Iranian thrust into Iraq," the official said.
The election commission's candidates list also showed at least 10 Sunni groups that have defied the clerics' demand for a boycott. Privately, many Iraqi and US officials have conceded that the Sunni turnout in the worst war-hit areas, especially Anbar Province west of Baghdad, encompassing Fallujah and Ramadi, as well as other important cities like Samarra, Baquba and Mosul, may yield negligible Sunni turnouts.
Large Sunni communities elsewhere, including Baghdad and Basra, the country's two largest cities, might defy the boycott, these officials believe. If so, they will have a choice, if they favor Sunni-led groups, of four major coalition groups that have fielded a mix of secular, tribal and religious candidates, as well as several individual parties.
Two parties represent rival claimants to the Hashemite
monarchy in Baghdad that was ended in 1958 with the assassination of King Faisal II, an event that led to the rise of the Baath Party and Saddam. One of the Sunni parties, the Iraqi Islamic Party, has fielded 275 candidates, more even than the Shiite religious alliance, with 228.
But the largest unknown is the effect insurgents will have on voting. After a protracted debate, US officials have ruled that security at the 9,000 polling stations will be provided by Iraq's 120,000-strong security forces, with units of the 150,000 US troops deployed across the country by the end of January "over the horizon," out
of sight but close enough to intervene. The decision has been contested by some US commanders, who have said privately that their experience, particularly in Sunni-majority areas, is that people have scant confidence in Iraqi police and guardsmen, and have said that they would be more likely to vote if US troops formed an inner cordon.
Another option, staggering the voting over a period of days or weeks to allow troops and police to be concentrated at polling stations, was also rejected after Iraqi and US officials, with support from UN election advisers, concluded that it would cause more problems than it would solve. For one thing, these officials said, moving troops around the country would present major security problems, given the frequency of insurgent attacks on the country's highways, as well as giving the insurgents more time to choose their targets and more opportunities to attack ballot boxes stored while awaiting a nationwide count.
To The Honorable Legislative Speaker Han Kuo-yu (韓國瑜): We would like to extend our sincerest regards to you for representing Taiwan at the inauguration of US President Donald Trump on Monday. The Taiwanese-American community was delighted to see that Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan speaker not only received an invitation to attend the event, but successfully made the trip to the US. We sincerely hope that you took this rare opportunity to share Taiwan’s achievements in freedom, democracy and economic development with delegations from other countries. In recent years, Taiwan’s economic growth and world-leading technology industry have been a source of pride for Taiwanese-Americans.
Next week, the nation is to celebrate the Lunar New Year break. Unfortunately, cold winds are a-blowing, literally and figuratively. The Central Weather Administration has warned of an approaching cold air mass, while obstinate winds of chaos eddy around the Legislative Yuan. English theologian Thomas Fuller optimistically pointed out in 1650 that “it’s always darkest before the dawn.” We could paraphrase by saying the coldest days are just before the renewed hope of spring. However, one must temper any optimism about the damage being done in the legislature by the opposition Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP), under
To our readers: Due to the Lunar New Year holiday, from Sunday, Jan. 26, through Sunday, Feb. 2, the Taipei Times will have a reduced format without our regular editorials and opinion pieces. From Tuesday to Saturday the paper will not be delivered to subscribers, but will be available for purchase at convenience stores. Subscribers will receive the editions they missed once normal distribution resumes on Sunday, Feb. 2. The paper returns to its usual format on Monday, Feb. 3, when our regular editorials and opinion pieces will also be resumed.
Young Taiwanese are consuming an increasing amount of Chinese content on TikTok, causing them to have more favorable views of China, a Financial Times report cited Taiwanese social scientists and politicians as saying. Taiwanese are being exposed to disinformation of a political nature from China, even when using TikTok to view entertainment-related content, the article published on Friday last week said. Fewer young people identify as “Taiwanese” (as opposed to “Chinese”) compared with past years, it wrote, citing the results of a survey last year by the Taiwan Public Opinion Foundation. Nevertheless, the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) would be hard-pressed