"why would anyone with a knowledge of your past conduct in the Middle East
have any reason to believe your ridiculous lies that it is "democracy" you are pursuing in Iraq?"Because that is in fact exactly what is happening.
Are you living in fantasy land again?
8.56 million Iraqis voted in the 2005 election. (ordered by the United States)
(US also demanded women be allowed to vote and have MP seats)
Shiite Muslim Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistanti supported
the elections and is considered by many to be the most
revered and most influential leader among Iraq's 15 million Shiite Muslims.
The current gvt in Iraq got a bigger percentage of votes in the 2005 election
than your 27% Hezbollah got in it's 2005 election.
Iraq sets Oct. 1 electionProvincial voting called key reform
February 14, 2008
By STEVEN R. HURST and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- The Iraqi parliament cleared the way Wednesday for provincial elections this year that could give Sunnis a stronger voice and usher in vast changes to Iraq's power structure.
The new law, which set the vote for Oct. 1, is
one of the most sweeping changes pushed by the Bush administration and signals that Iraq's politicians may take small steps toward reconciliation.
Passage of reforms to ease Iraq's sectarian and ethnic rifts went hand in hand with reducing violence as the primary goals for the 30,000-troop surge President George W. Bush ordered early last year.
The law was bundled with a $48-billion budget for 2008 and another measure that grants limited amnesty to prisoners in Iraqi custody. The measures still must be approved by Iraq's three-man presidency council.
Kurds, who operate from a semiautonomous region in the north, insisted on the legislative maneuvering because they feared getting double-crossed on a deal that maintained their 17% share of the budget.
The elections are likely to reshape Iraq's political map. Sunnis, who sat out the 2005 voting, could claim a much stronger role in government. They have provided crucial security help by joining U.S.-led battles against Al Qaeda in Iraq and other insurgents.
Among Iraq's majority Shi'ites, the elections could be an important test of strength for rival factions fighting for control of oil-rich southern Iraq.
The law calls for the provinces to work with the United Nations on how elections will operate. Also, the measure would allow provinces to form regional bodies that would begin making many decisions now made by authorities in Baghdad.
Debate on the measure ended in an 82-82 tie, broken by parliament Speaker Mahmoud al-Mashhadani. On Tuesday night, he threatened to disband parliament and call early elections because lawmakers had been unable to compromise.
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080214/NEWS07/802140389/1009/NEWS07