well, it sounded pretty good for a couple days, but below doesn't sound very good at all. I figure the Repubs best chance to pass the Iraqi Cons ution is massive Florida-style voting fraud.
If the Cons ution gets voted down this weekend, then the US should start pulling out and let the Iraqis have their Shiite/Sunni/Kurd civil war.
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The New York Times
October 12, 2005
Sunni Leaders Offer Mixed Views of Deal on Cons ution
By DEXTER FILKINS
BAGHDAD, Iraq, Oct. 12 - Sunni Arab leaders offered a mixed reaction today to a last-minute deal aimed at bolstering the prospects of Iraq's cons ution, which is to set to go before Iraqi voters in a nationwide referendum on Saturday.
A number of Sunni religious and political leaders, whose community forms the backbone of the guerilla insurgency, said they would continue to oppose the draft charter, despite the agreement Tuesday of the Iraqi Islamic Party, the country's largest Sunni Arab political party. Among the rejectionists was the Association of Muslim Scholars, which represents hundreds of Sunni clerics from across the country.
"We are against this cons ution because we think it encourages the sectarian division of this country," said Isam Al Rawi, of the Muslim clerics.
But at least one conservative Sunni leader, Mahmood Al Mashahadani, declared today that he had changed his mind and decided to endorse the cons ution and would urge Iraqis to approve it Saturday. Mr. Mashahadani made the statement a day after Iraqi leaders announced that they had agreed to insert a mechanism into the cons ution that could allow for substantial changes to it after the new, full-term national assembly is chosen in the December elections. That agreement prompted the endorsement of the Iraqi Islamic Party.
"It's a hard fact that if we want to want to achieve our demands of freeing the country from occupation, we have to engage in the political process to do so," Mr. Mashahadani said. "We will call on all the voters to say "yes," because there is no meaning in saying "no."
The Iraqi National Assembly approved the revision this evening, when no one raised any objections to the proposal.
The developments came as the campaign of violence continued ahead of the referendum Saturday. Today, a suicide bomber killed at least 20 Iraqis and wounded 30 others at an army recruiting center near Tal Afar today - the second time this small northwestern town was targeted by insurgents in as many days.
The mixed reaction to the deal, while perhaps not quite what the Iraqi government and its Americans were hoping for, suggested that their strategy of driving a wedge into Iraq's Sunni population was showing some success.
Iraqi leaders hailed the deal today as all but ensuring that the cons ution would be approved Saturday. Sunnis are thought to make up a majority in only three of Iraq's provinces, and they can defeat the cons ution if they can muster two-thirds majorities in all three provinces against it.
That prospect, which seemed unlikely before, seemed more improbable after Tuesday's agreement. At a ceremony today, Shiite leaders said the agreement with the Iraqi Islamic Party had all but ensured the charter's success.
"We were confident before, but now we are totally confident," said Ali Dabagh, a member of the Shiite alliance that holds a majority of the seats in the national assembly.
But for weeks, the greatest concern of Iraqi and American leaders has been that the cons ution would pass without significant Sunni support, and possibly drive more Iraqis toward violence. Such an outcome would undercut one of the principal goals of the American-fostered democratic process that had been unfolding here over the past year; that the process itself would co-opt the insurgency by giving more Sunnis a take in the new Iraq.
So far, that hasn't happened. The Sunnis largely boycotted the elections in January, and then, in August, a group of Sunni leader refused to support the draft cons ution agreed on by Shiite and Kurdish negotiators.
The deal Tuesday was the first sign that the Iraqi leaders, with American prodding, might begin to reverse that.
In the attack in Tal Afar, a man wearing an explosive belt blew himself up outside the Al-Qualah army recruitment center about six miles outside the town, where Iraqis were gathering to apply for jobs, said Saleh Al-Qadoo, head doctor at Tal Afar hospital. "The explosion was horrible," he said, recounting witness accounts. He added that the death toll of 20 seemed certain to rise.
Elsewhere in Iraq today, three suicide car bombs and two roadside bomb explosions killed one Iraqi and wounded 28, raising the number of victims of the insurgency to 425 in the past 17 days, The Associated Press reported.
* Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company


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