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USADI Dispatch
A weekly Publication of the US Alliance for
Democratic Iran
Volume II, Issue 38
Monday, December 12, 2005
Weekly
Commentary
Keep
Tehran’s Hands off Iraq Elections
In what could be seen as an insight into the expected rise in
human rights abuses in Iraq if a Tehran-influenced government
were to take over after the December 15 elections in Iraq, the
U.S. military discovered a second secret detention center run by
the operatives of Iran-linked Badr brigade which also acts as
the Interior Ministry's special commando force.
As the clerical regime is working feverishly to secure a “win”
at any price for its allies and affiliates a couple of days from
now, it is still not too late to intensify efforts to thwart
Tehran’s sinister designs to rob the Iraqi people from a free
and fair election.
From Tehran’s point of view, victory of the pro-Iran Shi'ite
block is a must. This block is mainly comprised of the Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), headed by
the cleric Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, and the Dawa party. It has been
accused of violent pre-election attacks against the supporters
of the rival secular Shiite block.
In the absence of such a “win,” Iranian officials warn, the
inroads Tehran has already made in Iraq since 2003, would be
almost undone. That would mean a strategic blow to Iran's
ambitious plans for regional dominance by having a “friendly”
government in Iraq.
Unlike the January elections, this pro-Tehran Shiite alliance
has so far failed to gain the official endorsement of the Grand
Ayatollah Ali Sistani and three other grand ayatollahs. Deprived
of such a crucial backing in midst of growing disenchantment of
many Shiites, the alliance was prompted to distribute false
literature, claiming that the Ayatollah Sistani had called on
Iraqis to only vote for religious candidates. A few days ago,
the Grand Ayatollah's office categorically denied ever issuing
such an edict.
Under such circumstances, the clerical regime has intensified
its efforts to tamper with the vote by putting into effect an
elaborate scheme in the past several months.
Tehran is perhaps justified to boast of being in "control of
developments in Iraq" given the relatively mild reaction to its
three-year meddling in Iraq. Behind the scenes, however, the
clerical regime is not leaving anything to chance.
An Iraqi news website reported last Wednesday that Iran was
implementing a three-phased plan to rig the elections and had
mobilized its “agents” in Iraq accordingly. Emboldened by their
success in rigging the Presidential election in Iran last June,
the mullahs are trying to duplicate the scheme in Iraq.
According to the Iran Focus website which first published the
translation of this report, the first stage of the plan calls
for voting multiple times with forged ballots. During the second
stage, Tehran’s agents will attempt to tamper with the records
of all the ballot boxes at the end of the polls, the report
said. The third stage of tampering is supposed to occur when the
final voting slips are delivered to the provincial capitals for
transfer to the United Nations’ tally center in Baghdad.
In addition, recent news indicate that in an operation run by
the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) and with
assistance of the Dawa Party, Tehran had dispatched hundreds of
its agents under the guise of pilgrims to the southern Iraqi
provinces of al-Amara and al-Kut in a bid to coerce the
non-suspecting Shiite Iraqis to vote for the pro-Tehran
candidates. It was further reported that the convoys carried
large amount of cash and campaign posters of Iranian-backed
candidates.
Last week, Iran’s former president and still-influential Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani joined the chorus of other top officials to
say that Washington had lost in Iraq and Tehran had won.
"America never imagined that the invasion of Iraq and
Afghanistan would be to Iran’s advantage and to its own
detriment,” Rafsanjani boasted.
The strategic cost of inaction or downplaying of Iran’s threat
to an independent, democratic and unified Iraq, surpasses any
perceived short-term benefit stemming from the naïve belief that
diplo-talk will deter Iran from further meddling in the Iraqi
affairs. This type of naiveté is nothing short of a strategic
blunder with long-term and wide-ranging implications for the
Middle East and beyond. (USADI)
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The US Alliance for Democratic Iran (USADI), is a
US-based, non-profit, independent organization, which promotes
informed policy debate, exchange of ideas, analysis, research
and education to advance a US policy on Iran which will
benefit America’s interests, both at home and in the Middle
East, through supporting Iranian people’s aspirations for
a democratic, secular, and peaceful government, free of tyranny,
fundamentalism, weapons of mass destruction, and terrorism.
USADI supports the Iranian peoples' aspirations
for democracy, peace, human rights, women’s equality,
freedom of expression, separation of church and state,
self-determination, control of land and resources,
cultural integrity, and the right to development and prosperity.
The USADI is not affiliated with any government
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is solely responsible for its activities and decisions.
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