You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Iraq-Jordan
Allawi Starts Work on Cabinet
2004-05-30
Iyad Allawi, named to become the first prime minister in post-Saddam Hussein Iraq, reviewed a possible government line-up yesterday. The scion of a wealthy political family, Allawi is not the seasoned technocrat that UN and coalition officials had earmarked to lead the country to its first elections since the US-led invasion. UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, who is overseeing the selection of the interim executive set to assume sovereignty from the US-led coalition on June 30, had been expected to make a formal announcement to the Security Council next month. An Iraqi official said US overseer Paul Bremer presented a fait accompli to Brahimi by pressing interim Governing Council members to make a quick decision. “On Thursday, Bremer informed the council members that they had to agree on the name of the prime minister by Friday at the latest,” said the official involved in the nomination process. “Because the Americans were in such a hurry, Brahimi was not able to inform the (Security) Council of the result of his consultations,” the official said.

The official said the surprise changes in the nomination process could also see the senior US-backed Sunni official Adnan Pachachi take the post of president that seemed promised to current Governing Council head Ghazi Al-Yawar. A leading Kurdish member of the Governing Council, Mahmud Othman, said the line-up of the new government would be decided by Sunday at the latest. The 58-year-old Allawi returned last April from years in exile, after failing to carry out a US Central Intelligence Agency-backed coup against his archrival Saddam Hussein in 1996. While ordinary Iraqis may see him as a US puppet, Allawi was chosen chiefly for his security background and was seen as the best candidate to restore calm.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Wow! My take is that the Iraqis have got ahead of us. Imagine them deciding who they want to take the reins. Our experiment is bearing fruit early.
Posted by: Brooks   2004-05-30 9:21:20 PM  

#2  This is shaping up nicely. Notice how things are moving ahead while Brahimi stands in place. This guy was a dud from the outset, but that's to be expected from the UN.
Posted by: Mike Wiley   2004-05-30 4:13:05 AM  

#1  How interesting -- flanking Brahimi, and done by the IGC so that we don't have (too many) fingerprints on it?
Posted by: Steve White   2004-05-30 3:35:25 AM  

00:00