Everything about Nouri Al-maliki totally explained
Nouri Kamel Mohammed Hassan al-Maliki (
Arabic: نوري كامل محمّد حسن المالكي,
transliterated Nūrī Kāmil al-Mālikī; born
June 20,
1950), also known as
Jawad al-Maliki, is the
Prime Minister of Iraq and the secretary-general of the
Islamic Dawa Party. Al-Maliki and
his government succeeded the
Iraqi Transitional Government. His
37-member Cabinet was approved by the
National Assembly and sworn in on
May 20,
2006.
Al-Maliki's constitutional
mandate will last until 2010. On
April 26,
2006, al-Maliki's office announced that he'd thenceforth use the first name Nouri instead of his
pseudonym Jawad.
Early life
In 1950 Nouri Kamel al-Maliki was born in Abu Gharaq, a central Iraqi town lying between
Karbala and
Al Hillah. He attended school in Al Hindiyah (
Hindiya). Al-Maliki received a
bachelor's degree at
Usul al-Din College in
Baghdad, and a
master's degree in
Arabic literature from
Baghdad University. Al-Maliki lived for a time in
Al Hillah, where he worked in the education department. He joined the Islamic Dawa Party in the late 1960s while studying at university.
Al-Maliki's grandfather,
Muhammad Hasan Abi al-Mahasin, was a poet and cleric who served as Iraq's Minister of Education under King
Faisal I.
Exile and return to Iraq
In 1980, the
Saddam Hussein government sentenced al-Maliki to
death for his active role in the Dawa party and thereafter he lived in
exile, first in
Iran and later in
Syria. In Syria he headed the party's office, a branch responsible for directing activists and guerrillas fighting Saddam Hussein's regime from outside
Iraq. He was elected chairman of the Joint Action Committee, a
Damascus-based opposition coalition that led to the founding of the
Iraqi National Congress, a
United States-backed body of opposition to the Saddam Hussein regime which the
Dawa Party participated in between 1992 and 1995. Some foreign diplomats, responsible for maintaining links with the Iraqi opposition in Syria before the war, have maintained that al-Maliki was never more than a minor figure in the period before 2003. While in exile al-Maliki adopted the pseudonym "Jawad", which he used until after his return to Iraq.
Returning home after Saddam's fall, he became the deputy leader of the Supreme National Debaathification Commission of the
Iraqi Interim Government, formed to purge former
Baath Party officials from the military and government.
Al-Maliki was elected to the transitional
National Assembly in January 2005. He was considered a tough negotiator in drawn-out deliberations over the new constitution, and was the senior
Shi'ite member of the committee that drafted the new
constitution that was passed in October 2005.
Prime Minister nomination
In the December 2005 parliamentary elections, the
United Iraqi Alliance won the plurality of seats, and nominated
Ibrahim al-Jaafari to be Iraq's first full-term post-war prime minister. However, by April 2006, it became evident that interim Prime Minister al-Jaafari, who was criticized for having led an ineffective and
sectarian government, could win neither
Kurdish nor
Sunni support in parliament. In a compromise, al-Jaafari was then removed as the candidate, and on
April 22,
2006, al-Maliki was named prime minister-designate by
President Jalal Talabani.
Former
United States Ambassador to Iraq,
Zalmay Khalilzad, has stated that "[Maliki's] reputation is as someone who is independent of Iran," and that "He sees himself as an Arab" and an Iraqi nationalist. Khalilzad also maintained that Iran "pressured everyone for Jaafari to stay." Maliki's nomination is seen as a victory for Khalilzad's negotiating efforts. Khalilzad praised Iraqi statesmen, saying "It showed that
Sistani doesn't take Iranian direction. It showed that
Abdul Aziz Hakim doesn't succumb to Iranian pressure. He stood up to Iran. It showed the same thing about the Kurdish leaders." This interpretation reflects the position of the U.S. Government. On
May 20,
2006, al-Maliki presented his
Cabinet to Parliament, minus permanent ministers of Defense and of Interior. He announced that he'd temporarily handle the Interior Ministry himself, and
Salam al-Zobaie would temporarily act as Defense Minister. "We pray to God almighty to give us strength so we can meet the ambitious goals of our people who have suffered a lot," al-Maliki told the members of the assembly.Maliki has brought Sunnis into his national unity government.
In Office
As Prime Minister, al-Maliki has vowed to crack down on militias which he calls "organized armed groups who are acting outside the state and outside the law." He had been criticized for taking too long to name permanent Interior and Defense ministers, which he did on June 8, 2006, just as Maliki and the Americans announced the killing of
Al Qaeda in Iraq leader
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Meanwhile, Maliki criticized coalition armed forces as reports of allegedly deliberate killings of Iraqi civilians (at
Haditha and elsewhere) became known. He has been quoted as saying, "[t]his is a phenomenon that has become common among many of the multinational forces. No respect for citizens, smashing civilian cars and killing on a suspicion or a hunch. It's unacceptable." According to Ambassador Khalilzad, Maliki had been misquoted, but it was unclear in what way.
On
December 30,
2006, Maliki signed the death warrant of
Saddam Hussein and declined a stay of execution, saying there would be “no review or delay” in the event. Citing the wishes of relatives of Hussein's victims, he said, “Our respect for human rights requires us to execute him.”
(External Link
) Hussein's execution was carried out on
December 30,
2006 (notably, the first
Sunni day of the feast of
Eid ul-Adha).
After the controversial Baghdad shooting involving the private security contractor
Blackwater USA and an unknown number of Iraqi civilians, Prime Minister Maliki said that the incident had generated such "widespread anger and hatred" that it would be "in everyone's interest if the embassy used another company while the company is suspended."
Official visits
On
June 13,
2006,
U.S. President George W. Bush paid a visit to
Baghdad to meet with Maliki and
President of Iraq Jalal Talibani, as a token of support for the new government. On
June 25, al-Maliki presented a national reconciliation plan to the Iraqi parliament. The peace plan sets out to remove powerful militias from the streets, open a dialogue with rebels, and review the status of purged members of the once-ruling Ba'ath party. Some viewed this as a bold step towards rebuilding Iraq and reaching out to
Sunnis.
By July 2006, when al-Maliki visited the United States, violence had continued and even escalated, leading many to conclude that the reconciliation plan wasn't working or was moving too slow.
On
July 26,
2006, al-Maliki addressed a joint meeting of the
U.S. Congress.
. Several New York Democrats boycotted the speech after Al-Maliki condemned
Israel's
attack on
Lebanon.
Howard Dean, the DNC chairman, accused Al-Maliki of being an "anti-Semite" and said the
United States shouldn't spend so much on Iraq and then hand it over to people like Maliki.
On
September 11 2006, Al-Maliki made his first official visit to neighbouring
Shi'a Iran, whose alleged influence on Iraq is a matter of concern for
Washington DC. He conspicuously chose
Sunni Persian Gulf Arab states for his first foreign trip. He discussed with Iranian officials, including president
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the "principle of no interference in internal affairs" during his visit on
September 11 2006 and
September 12 2006, for example political and security issues. The announcement of his visit followed a dispute between the two countries in which Iranian border guards in the week from
September 3 2006 detained Iraqi guards after accusing them of crossing into Iran. Ibrahim Shaker, Iraqi defence ministry spokesman, told the Iraqi patrol, five soldiers, one officer and one translator, had simply been doing "their duty".
On
September 19,
2006, Prime Minister Maliki made an official visit to
Tehran,
Iran, to meet with Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei – a rare honor for a visiting dignitary. Prime Minister Maliki called the Islamic Republic of Iran “a good friend and brother.” Such a statement runs counter to Bush’s policy of isolating Iran from the international community by focusing exclusively on Tehran’s uranium enrichment. At the same time it illustrates that the regimes deriving legitimacy from different versions of democracy in the Middle East can be warm friends.
The Bush administration's unrelenting pressure on the Iraqi government resulted in the collapse of the proposed Baghdad-Tehran defense cooperation pact.
Governmental prospects
The stability of Maliki’s government depends on a tenuous peace between
Moqtada al-Sadr, who controls one of the largest voting blocs in parliament, and
Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, who leads the
United Iraqi Alliance and the country’s largest Shi'a party, the
Islamic Iraqi Supreme Council. A generations-long feud between their families has carried over into a personal and political rivalry between the men, and their militias have periodically clashed.
In October 2006, doubts grew concerning Maliki's willingness or ability to defeat Shi'a militias. Maliki criticized an American-led raid that targeted a militia leader because, he asserted, it had been conducted without his government's approval. In 2007, sources inside the Iraqi and American militaries indicated that Maliki's "Office of the Commander-in-Chief" within his government was pushing a Shiite agenda and overruling government ministers.
On January 2, 2007, the
Wall Street Journal published an interview with Maliki in which he said that he hadn't wanted to become Prime Minister of Iraq and that he'd only accepted the position out of a sense of duty. He also stated that he wished he could end his term before it expires in 2009.
On
January 13,
2007, Maliki selected Lieutenant General
Abud Qanbar as the Iraqi commander for the capital of
Baghdad, Iraq.
(External Link
)
In May 2007 he was elected secretary general of the Dawa Party, succeeding Jaafari. But his government was increasingly weakened, in particular after the withdrawal of the
Iraqi Accord Front, the main
Sunni bloc, from his coalition on August 1, 2007 .
Censorship
On
August 24,
2006, he banned television channels from broadcasting images of daily bloodshed in the country and warned of legal action against those violating the order. Major General
Rashid Flayah, head of a national police division added "...We are building the country with
Kalashnikovs and you should help in building it with the use of your pen".
Response to US critics
Hillary Clinton and
Carl Levin were two of several US politicians who called for him to be removed from office but he hit back and said the
Democratic senators saying that they were acting as if Iraq was "their property" and that they should "come to their senses" and "respect democracy".
In
August 2007,
CNN reported that the firm of Barbour, Griffith & Rogers had "begun a public campaign to undermine the government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki." The network described BGR as a "powerhouse Republican lobbying firm with close ties to the White House." CNN also mentioned that
Ayad Allawi is both al-Maliki's rival and BGR's client, although it didn't assert that Allawi had hired BGR to undermine al-Maliki.
Quotations
- "I consider myself a friend of the U.S., but I'm not America's man in Iraq."
- "I wish I could be done with it even before the end of this term. I didn't want to take this position. I only agreed because I thought it would serve the national interest, and I won't accept it again."
- "As Iraq has triumphed over terrorism, it'll triumph in the international arena."
- " We didn't provide any sanctuary or opportunity for any outlaws, whether they were followers of the Mehdi Army or Muqtada al-Sadr or the Islamic Council or even of the Dawa party. This is the truth all Iraqis know and are proud of -- we deal with all outlaws equally...I would be very easy with any decision that goes through the democratic framework and will be very tough if anything is being tried outside the democratic framework." "
Further Information
Get more info on 'Nouri Al-maliki'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://nouri_al-maliki.totallyexplained.com">Nouri al-Maliki Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |