RS21968
Iraq: Politics, Elections, and Benchmarks
June 02, 2009

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Summary

Iraq's political system, the result of a U.S.-supported election process, is increasingly characterized by peaceful competition rather than violence, but sectarianism and ethnic and factional infighting continue to simmer. As 2009 began, there was renewed maneuvering by opponents of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki who view him as authoritarian and were perceived as conspiring to try to replace him, had his party fared poorly in the January 31, 2009, provincial elections. However, the elections strengthened Maliki and other Iraqis who believe that power should remain centralized in Baghdad, and Maliki is considered well positioned to compete in the parliamentary elections (to be held on January 30, 2010) that will select the next four-year government. The provincial elections, held in all provinces except Kirkuk and the Kurdish-controlled provinces, were relatively peaceful and there was a more diverse array of party slates than those that characterized the January 2005 provincial elections. Internal dissension within Iraq aside, the Bush Administration was optimistic that the passage of key laws in 2008, coupled with the provincial elections, would sustain recent reductions in violence. President Obama praised the orderliness and relative absence of violence of the provincial electionsan outcome that reaffirmed the Obama Administrations belief that it can proceed with a planned reduction of the U.S. troop presence (to about 35,000 50,000 U.S. forces by August 2010) without inordinate risk to Iraqi stability. Yet, violence has since increased in some areas of Iraq, particularly those where different ethnicities and sects live in close proximity. The elections also reduced U.S. concerns about Irans influence in Iraq, in part because pro-Iranian partiesparticularly those that maintain militias armed by Iranfared poorly. See CRS Report RL31339, Iraq: Post-Saddam Governance and Security, by Kenneth Katzman.

    Related Legislation:
  • S.2009

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