the gold medal for the most bizarre…

Posted on Monday 1 March 2010


By Hamza Hendawi
February 28, 2010

BAGHDAD – Ahmad Chalabi – a one-time Pentagon favourite whose faulty intelligence about weapons of mass destruction helped pave the way for the Iraq war – was a secular politician groomed by his U.S. backers to replace Saddam Hussein. After falling out with the Americans, the MIT graduate has reinvented himself – again. He is now a top candidate in an alliance led by an Iranian-backed Shiite religious party.

Chalabi, 65, has bolstered his Shiite credentials with a push against former Saddam loyalists from the helm of a committee that banned nearly 500 candidates linked to the ousted Baath Party from running in the March 7 election. The move has angered Iraq’s Sunni Arab minority and jeopardized U.S. efforts to promote the parliamentary vote as a chance to reconcile the rival Islamic sects following years of violence. "The Iraqi people have ousted Saddam but the Baath Party is now trying to barge into the political arena again despite the clauses in the constitution that ban the party," Chalabi said as he addressed a crowd of about 200 tribal leaders and other Shiites Sunday at a campaign rally in northern Baghdad.

It’s testimony to his ability to adapt and to the influence of religion on post-Saddam Iraqi politics despite a backlash against sectarian parties in provincial elections held last year. Chalabi has joined forces with anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr’s movement and the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, or SIIC, in a coalition called the Iraqi National Alliance. That raises the possibility that he could emerge as a compromise candidate for prime minister if the alliance wins the largest number of seats in the new 325-member legislature. He would be an unlikely choice, but the Sadrists might choose Chalabi since he’s more able to secure the support of other groups to join a coalition government…

As part of his latest political orientation, Chalabi has been making regular public appearances at major Shiite religious occasions, donning mourning black, for example, at ceremonies dedicated to the seventh century martyrdom of Imam Hussein, one of Shiism’s most revered saints when participants weep and beat their chests to show their sorrow. "Pray for [Islam’s Prophet] Muhammad and the family of Muhammad," was how Chalabi began Sunday’s address, using a phrase that’s more often used by Shiite clerics than a U.S.-educated politician in a dark business suit and a purple tie. The crowd liked it and recited a prayer out loud…

He also was at total ease laying out campaign promises that ranged from jobs, cheap housing, better education, fighting corruption and a transparent government. Of the wide range of topics he quickly touched on, he dwelt the longest on reinstating in government jobs Iraqis fired during Saddam’s rule for their political convictions or sectarian affiliation. It’s another favourite with Shiite voters. "He is an old fox," Kazim al-Muqdadai, a political analyst who lectures political science at Baghdad University, said of Chalabi. "He is only thinking of his personal glory."

Chalabi has drifted far from where he was on the eve of the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. At the time, his Pentagon backers saw him as a possible replacement for Saddam. Intelligence he provided on Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction gave the Bush administration reason to invade Iraq. He was a guest at Bush’s State of the Union address in 2004. When no WMDs were found, relations soured quickly. The Americans picked a rival Shiite, Ayad Allawi, for the prime minister’s job when they formally ended their occupation of Iraq in June 2004. It was during that year too that the Americans accused Chalabi of passing to Iran U.S. military secrets. Later, the many years he stayed outside Iraq – he left in the 1950s and lived mostly in the United States and Britain – began to hinder his political career since he had no genuine popular support. That meant a humiliating defeat in the first post-Saddam election for a full-term parliament in December 2005.

see also: Iraq News Agency, Iraq: Chalabi Tells General Odierno: ‘Mind Your Own Business’

Among the crazy stories from the early days of the Bush Administration, this one gets the Gold Medal for the most bizarre. Ahmed Chalabi left Iraq as a 13 year old during a coup that was the beginning of the Ba’ath Party’s rise to power. As mentioned in earlier posts, he came to lead the Iraq National Congress, a creation of our C.I.A. during Bush I’s Presidency. He was paid millions by our government and became the darling of the Neocons, feeding them fictitious propaganda confirming their plans to invade Iraq. When it turned out that all of his stories of al Qaeda connections and Weapons of Mass Destruction were wrong, he said, "We are heroes in error… As far as we’re concerned we’ve been entirely successful. That tyrant Saddam is gone and the Americans are in Baghdad. What was said before is not important. The Bush administration is looking for a scapegoat. We’re ready to fall on our swords if he wants." In case you’re confused about what he meant when he said that, I’ll translate, "We were lying to get you to invade Iraq and get rid of Hussein [for us]. Thanks, chumps." And then there were some other colossal blunders, like disbanding the Iraq Army and Purging the government of former Ba’athists. Who was on the council that did that, you wonder? Probably Ahmed Chalabi. He’s remained on the council that does the deBa’athing, and as this article reports, has deBa’athed to his heart’s content.

This son of rich Iraqis who fled Iraq at 13 when the Party ultimately lead by Hussein came to power, has been fleeing ever since. He fled Jordan to escape an embezzlement charge. He fled Iraq when a Kurdish Uprising he started went south. He fled the US after lying us into a war [the Bush Administration followed him willingly]. Now, a half a century later, he’s becoming a political force with the Iran-allied Shiites in Iraq, working his way up the political ladder.

Let me summarize:

Ahmed Chalabi, an M.I.T. trained mathematician was teaching in Lebanon. He formed a Bank in Jordan, but fled to avoid imprisonment for fraud. He was hired by the C.I.A. as part of an anti-Hussein operation called the Iraq National Congress. After a number of failed operations, Chalabi became the head of the INC. The organization was heavily funded by the US. When Bush was elected, Chalabi was the darling of the Neocons and became their major source of intelligence [fabricated intelligence], feeding them stories used for, among other things, their speeches, Colin Powell’s UN address, Judith Miller’s NY Times stories. He wanted us to install him to lead Iraq’s provisional government but the plan fell through at the 11th hour when we figured out he was passing information to Iran and that everything he had told us was a lie. He went to Iraq and lost the election, but remained as an Oil Minister and in charge of an election committee. He’s now the darling of the Iran backed Shiite Militias and looking for a high governmental post. He has been behind our invasion of Iraq, the deBa’athification that lead to the Insurgency, and the purge of Sunni candidates in the coming election, and now he’s telling us to stay out of Iraq’s business.

You just couldn’t make this story up if you tried. Like I said, "Among the crazy stories from the early days of the Bush Administration, this one gets the Gold Medal for the most bizarre."

A close second is the operation of the OLC in the DoJ [John Yoo]. emptywheel is doing a fascinating series on that one based on the OPR Report, but I’m waiting until she’s got it more unraveled to jump in. She’s just too detailed and too smart to follow until she gets her bearings.

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