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Special Report

Democracy Delayed

In their haste to exit Iraq, U.S. and international observers may be overlooking election fraud against liberal, pro-Western candidates.

Last week, following its review of documents charging fraud in Iraq's March 7 elections, an Iraqi court ordered a recount of votes in Baghdad.

Iraqi Parliamentarian Mithal al-Alusi, who ran on a platform of Iraqi relations with Israel and counter-terrorism cooperation with other democracies, including the United States, believes this development could produce a fair count for liberals like him -- who he thinks were shafted in March 7 elections that he believes were corrupted by Iran and the Saudis.

But he warns that the recount should be independently monitored, including by representatives of the United States. Otherwise, the corruption that he believes took place in last month's elections will only be repeated.

"It will be a disaster if the same people who did the first counting will do the second counting," Alusi said.

Alusi spoke with Faraj al-Haidari, head of the Iraqi Electoral Commission, who told him the recount will include 1,023 polling stations out of 11,000 in Baghdad. Alusi believes those stations where Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's State of Law bloc did poorly have been cherry-picked for recounting so as to benefit Maliki. So while the recount has the potential to yield a more accurate count, it will not yield one without international supervision, he maintains. In fact, absent real supervision by the United Nations Security Council and the U.S.,"it [will not be] a real recount, but a game, and the result will be a disaster and a security problem."

The Iraqi court's ruling -- which it handed down last Monday after Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's State of Law coalition submitted 4,000 documents as evidence of fraud -- highlights error on the part of the United Nations and the Obama Administration in certifying the March 7 election, Alusi maintains.

"This [court ruling] is proof that something was wrong with the [March 7] election," Alusi said. "The U.N. said the Iraqi election was clean, and the U.S. government said the Iraqi election was clean. Now we have it from [an] Iraqi court -- there is much proof that causes us to recount the results. That's what we said from the beginning. The European Commission did say it from the beginning, too."

Struan Stevenson, President of the European Parliament's Delegation for Relations with Iraq, said in a phone interview from Scotland Friday that he believes that powers weighing in on Iraq's election have willfully denied serious allegations of widespread fraud and voter intimidation.

"The U.S., the E.U., and the U.N. are like the three wise monkeys -- see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil," said Stevenson. "Any allegation that there's been widespread fraud or intimidation could bog them down and trap them into staying [in Iraq.] They are covering their eyes ... and saying, 'Just come to a decision as quickly as possible so we can get out of here.'"

Alusi says that, although the court's mandate of a Baghdad recount opens a window of opportunity for a more accurate count, signs are already pointing in the direction of more fraud due to lack of independent monitoring, especially by the U.S.

For one thing, Alusi says the Iraqi Election Commission has announced plans to transport ballots to three different locations for the counting, which strikes him as "not kosher."

"If you are recounting Baghdad votes, why not in one area?" he says.

Alusi, a Sunni, is no stranger to controversy. In 2004, as then-culture director of the Iraqi interim government's Office of de-Baathification, he traveled to Israel to promote cooperation between Iraq and the Jewish state. As payback for breaking the taboo in Iraqi society against going to Israel, terrorists murdered his two grown sons. Refusing to be intimidated, Alusi stayed in Iraq, got his political party, which champions human rights and counter-terrorism, onto the ballot, and won a seat in the December 2005 elections.

Now he believes that he and fellow liberals like Shiite politician Iyad Jamal al-Din are victims of fraud by forces within Iraq who are beholden to Iran and Saudi Arabia -- and who don't like the liberals' straight talk about how those powers need to stay out of Iraq.

"I heard it from my people 500 times, 'How can America let fascists hijack the election?'" he told me. "Simple people say, 'This is the time to have change, to stop Iranian influence.'

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About the Author

Heather Robinson is a New York-based journalist who has written for the Wall Street Journal, the New York Post, the New York Daily News and the Philadelphia Inquirer. She maintains the website heatherrobinson.net.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (16) | Leave a comment

JimH| 4.26.10 @ 8:05AM

We should be checking for hanging chads in Beirut?

Alan Brooks| 4.26.10 @ 10:24AM

Everyone secretly knows we'll be in Iraq after the deadline to leave expires. But Obama can't say so
-- looks bad in the papers:
"Joint Chiefs Say: 'Stay In Iraq til 2020' "

Foresight is 2020 (groan)

JP| 4.26.10 @ 11:18AM

The problem Alan is that we will run out of money well before 2020. Like the Brits in the 1950s and 1960s, we will be too broke to do anything. I am sure we can outsource this problem to China. They will be more than happy to pick up the slack, not to mention the oil.

Crusader| 4.26.10 @ 11:27PM

Democracy huh? They can have it. I personally prefer a Constitutional Republic based on Natural Law that protects the rights of all citizens over a Democracy based on Sharia Law with a Constitution based on Sharia as well. And good American men are dying for this. Amazing.

Pingback| 4.27.10 @ 1:05AM

Political Mavens » Democracy Delayed in Iraq links to this page. Here’s an excerpt:

…an Iraqi court ruled that sufficient evidence of likely fraud in Baghdad’s March 7 election exists to warrant a recount of the votes in Baghdad. In yesterday’s American Spectator I published this piece, Democracy Delayed, on alleged fraud likely perpetrated by Iran and Saudi Arabia in the election. Iraqi Parliamentarian Mithal al-Alusi, a fearless champion of human rights and of normalized relations…

Pingback| 4.27.10 @ 10:37AM

Heather Robinson » Democracy Delayed links to this page. Here’s an excerpt:

Heather Robinson » Democracy Delayed Heather Robinson Journalist - Middle East Commentator Links Commentary Features Profiles Blog Contact Democracy Delayed From The American Spectator by HEATHER ROBINSON Last week, following its review of documents charging fraud in Iraq’s March 7 elections, an Iraqi court ordered a recount of votes in Baghdad. Iraqi Parliamentarian Mithal…

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