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
Sunnis admit poll boycott blunder
2005-02-15
Iraq's Arab Sunnis will do a U-turn and join the political process despite their lack of representation in the newly elected national assembly, Sunni leaders said yesterday. Many Sunnis protested that the election was flawed and unfair, but in the wake of Sunday's results, which confirmed the marginalisation of what was Iraq's ruling class, their political parties want to lobby for a share of power.
Remind me who was saying that these jokers would come around? Some guy with a 'W' on his shirt?
"Our view is that this election was a step towards democracy and ending the occupation," said Ayad al-Samaray, the assistant general secretary of the Iraqi Islamic party. He said unnamed Sunni leaders blundered in depicting the election as a deepening of the occupation. The insurgency ravaging Iraq is based in Sunni areas, and there were fears that the violence would escalate if the once-dominant minority was further alienated. A call by clerics for a boycott, and threats by insurgents meant very few Sunnis voted in the January 30 poll. Having endured the brunt of US attacks in towns such as Falluja and Ramadi, many derided the ballot as an attempt to legitimise a foreign occupation. The consequent landslide for the Shias and Kurds means that they will drive the new government and the drafting of a constitution.

An alliance of cleric-backed Shias won 48% of the vote, which could give it a wafer-thin majority in the 275-seat assembly. Kurds won 26%, and a slate headed by the outgoing prime minister, Ayad Allawi, won almost 14%. All three blocs have promised to reach out to the Sunnis, who comprise a fifth of the population but won just a handful of seats because of low turnouts in their areas. This will soon be tested as parties forge alliances and tussle for government posts, including that of prime minister and president.

Secular Sunni leaders yesterday accepted the victors' invitation to participate, potentially draining support from the insurgency. "We can't say it was wise or logical to not participate; it was an emotional decision," said Mr Samaray. "Now the Sunni community faces the fact that it made a big mistake and that it would have been far better to participate." His party, the main Sunni group since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime, was in talks with Kurds and Shias. He added: "The Sunni community will accept to share this country with others. They do not need to dominate."
Mighty big of him.
Posted by:Steve White

#15  I agree that you cannot just shut out the Sunnis, but then again you cannot give them the full meal deal after they refused the menu. If some secondary Sunni voice in the formation of a new government can be had without derailing the process made by the courageous participants in the election, then a giant step has been made. It is my hope that the Iraqis will be able to build on this. Each time they take steps like the election, and subsequent parliamentary processes, the stronger the nation becomes. The stakes are high, but we have a good start.

Now we just have to keep Iran's dirty little hands out of the soup. And an eye on the Saudis. And the Iranian's little dog Syria, too.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2005-02-15 11:00:20 PM  

#14  You snooze, you lose ...
Posted by: AJackson   2005-02-15 10:53:18 PM  

#13  ..Sunnie admision that they made a mistake in not particapating in the election is trully amazeing.

All very nice, but this should not be a reason for anyone to allow the Sunnis to have anything more than a secondary voice in the drafting of a constitution. Since they decided to forego large-scale participation in the just-concluded election process, then they have to live with the consequences of their decisions.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2005-02-15 7:25:13 PM  

#12  "Better luck next election!"

(schmucks...)
Posted by: mojo   2005-02-15 4:33:09 PM  

#11  I think the "engineer" and the "motorman" have the right idea...

FULL SPEED AHEAD...

Of course, the ACLU wants to sue if any those three running fools drops dead of a heart attack...
Posted by: BigEd   2005-02-15 12:12:32 PM  

#10  OOPS. Try this and pull up 2/10/05.
http://cagle.slate.msn.com/politicalcartoons/pccartoons/archives/asay.asp?Action=GetImage
Posted by: GK   2005-02-15 10:56:15 AM  

#9  The Colorado Springs Gazette political cartoonist, Chuck Asay, had a take on this in last Thursday's cartoon.

Posted by: GK   2005-02-15 10:52:37 AM  

#8  Heh. The F**kin' Duh of the Century.
Posted by: .com   2005-02-15 10:38:02 AM  

#7  These are the people the anti-overthrow crowd told us couldn't handle democracy and that it was stupid to try foisting it on them (cos they're darkish skinned and speak funny, presumably). Turned out the majority embraced democracy with great enthusiasm and the rest have taken a further two weeks to catch on...
Posted by: Bulldog   2005-02-15 8:31:55 AM  

#6  can someone tell me what the hell is wrong with these ppl? Seems too me they make the stupidest damn decisions everytime they turn around
Posted by: Thraing Hupoluper1864   2005-02-15 8:26:29 AM  

#5  Two things that surprise and impress me(1)The restraint shown by the Kurds and Shites(2)Given Arab propensity to blame the other guy,Sunnie admision that they made a mistake in not particapating in the election is trully amazeing.
Posted by: raptor   2005-02-15 8:24:07 AM  

#4  what makes me think that Iraq is going to make it is their response to the Sunni's. It's clear they are trying to set up a govn't that will work in the long run. You think they'd be itching at the trigger finger after what the Baathist's have put them through. Impressive.
Posted by: 2b   2005-02-15 4:09:39 AM  

#3  Well maybe the Sunni will blame the Association of Muslim ass clowns Scholars for their stupidity. Didn't vote? Don't bitch. Every effort was made to allow those who wanted to vote to do so even Sunni's.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom   2005-02-15 3:22:44 AM  

#2  Let the Sunni cry us a bend in the River!

...The ground has shifted so fast from under the MSM, the only thing keeping them up is hot air!



Posted by: Raed all about it !   2005-02-15 3:10:30 AM  

#1  Heh. Dubya wasn't the only one predicting the losers would fold before they completely slit their own throats. Even more amusing is the idiot media's parroting of the nonsense from the genocide-and-theft crowd, at every turn painting the Sunnis as some pitiable beleaguered minority instead of a group that's lucky to be breathing after the s**t they supported or countenanced.
Posted by: Verlaine in Iraq   2005-02-15 2:03:08 AM  

00:00