Brian Whitaker and Luke Harding in Sulaimaniya
April 1, 2003
The Guardian
A disagreement has broken out at a senior level within the Bush
administration over a new government that the US is secretly
planning in Kuwait to rule Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the
overthrow of Saddam Hussein.
Under the plan, the government will consist of 23 ministries,
each headed by an American. Every ministry will also have four
Iraqi advisers appointed by the Americans, the Guardian has learned.
The government will take over Iraq city by city. Areas declared
"liberated" by General Tommy Franks will be transferred to the
temporary government under the overall control of Jay Garner,
the former US general appointed to head a military occupation of Iraq.
In anticipation of the Baghdad regime's fall, members of this
interim government have begun arriving in Kuwait.
Decisions on the government's composition appear to be entirely
in US hands, particularly those of Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy
secretary of defence. This has annoyed Gen Garner, who is
officially in charge but who, according to sources close to the
planning of the government has had to accept a number of
controversial Iraqis in advisory roles.
The most controversial of Mr Wolfowitz's proposed appointees is
Ahmed Chalabi, the head of the opposition Iraqi National
Congress, together with his close associates, including his
nephew. During his years in exile, Mr Chalabi has cultivated
links with Congress to raise funds, and has become the
Pentagon's darling among the Iraqi opposition. The defence
secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, is one of his strongest supporters.
The state department and the CIA, on the other hand, regard
him with deep suspicion.
He has not lived in Iraq since 1956, apart from a short period
organising resistance in the Kurdish north in the 1990s, and is
thought to have little support in the country.
Mr Chalabi had envisaged becoming prime minister in an interim
government, and is disappointed that no such post is included in
the US plan. Instead, the former banker will be offered an
advisory job at the finance ministry.
A senior INC official said last night that Mr Chalabi would not
countenance a purely advisory position. The official added: "It is
certainly not the INC's intention to advise any US ministers in
Iraq. Our position is that no Americans should run Iraqi
ministries. The US is talking about an interim Iraqi authority
taking over, but we are calling for a provisional government."
The revelation about direct rule is likely to cause intense political
discomfort for Tony Blair, who has been pressing for UN and
international involvement in Iraq's reconstruction to overcome
opposition in Britain as well as heal divisions across Europe.
The Foreign Office said last night that a "relatively fluid" number
of British officials had been seconded to the planning team.
Last week Colin Powell, the US secretary of state, told
Congress that immediately after the fall of President Saddam's
regime, the US military would take control of the Iraqi government.
His only concession was that this would be done with the "full
understanding" of the international community and with "the UN
presence in the form of a special coordinator".