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[casi] Bush Chooses Iraq Civilian Administrator !




Friends,

I found the following interesting article on Yahoo.

I remember the US stating over and over that Iraq will
be ruled by Iraqis, and that Iraq will switch from
dictatorship to democracy overnight...

Well, it now seems that an employee of Henry Kissinger
will become the ruler of Iraq, apointed by Bush. No
wonder those "Iraqis" in London who campaigned for the
war are now silent..

Interesting in the article is the following:
"Overseeing the transition from rule by Saddam Hussein
to Iraqi opponents of the deposed president is a
tricky assignment in which the Bush administration is
playing an aggressive role while also declaring it is
up to a wide diversity of Iraqi groups to choose a new
government."
So it will not be up to the Iraqis to choose their new
ruler or government, because the US has
"democratically" decided that Iraq will be ruled by
"opponents of the deposed president", meaning CIA
agents imported by the US...Long Live Democracy in the
New Iraq...

The full article follows.
Have a nice Labour Day (for those who celebrate it..)

HZ
--------------------------------------
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20030501/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_civilian_administrator_2

Bush Chooses Iraq Civilian Administrator
Wed Apr 30, 9:49 PM ET

By BARRY SCHWEID, AP Diplomatic Writer

WASHINGTON - The Bush administration has chosen L.
Paul Bremer, a former head of the State Department's
counterterrorism office, to become civilian
administrator in Iraq (news - web sites) and oversee
the country's transition to democratic rule.

Bremer's selection, disclosed Wednesday by a senior
U.S. official, will put him in charge of a transition
team that includes retired Army Lt. Gen. Jay Garner
and Zalmay Khalilzad, the special White House envoy in
the Persian Gulf region.

Bremer left the State Department, where he was an
assistant to former secretaries William P. Rogers and
Henry Kissinger, to join Kissinger Associates, a
consulting firm studded with both Democrats and
Republicans that held top U.S. government posts.
Currently, Bremer serves as chairman and chief
executive of Marsh Crisis Consulting company.

Overseeing the transition from rule by Saddam Hussein
(news - web sites) to Iraqi opponents of the deposed
president is a tricky assignment in which the Bush
administration is playing an aggressive role while
also declaring it is up to a wide diversity of Iraqi
groups to choose a new government.

Newsweek first reported Bremer's selection on its Web
site Wednesday. The report was confirmed by a senior
U.S. official who declined otherwise to be identified.


The opposition groups have held two meetings and after
a third one are expected to begin the process of
transition at a conference of all contending forces.
Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites)
assured Congress this week that while the United
States was playing a major role in Baghdad it seeks to
turn over control of the country to Iraqis as soon as
possible.

Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, meanwhile,
has warned that the Bush administration would not
permit an Iran-style Muslim fundamentalist government
take charge in Baghdad.

For his part, Powell has said there is no reason to
rule out a government rooted in the Muslim religion,
citing Turkey and Pakistan as examples of democracies
coexisting with the religion.

On Wednesday, Powell told a Senate Appropriations
subcommittee that Iran had been warned against trying
to infiltrate Iraq to influence the course of a
post-Saddam government.

The overthrow of Saddam by a U.S. led military
coalition casts the Bush administration in the spot of
trying to maintain order in Iraq and helps sort out
competing and sometimes conflicting goals of Iraqis
who opposed the old government from exile and others
who remained in the country.

During a 23-year State Department career, Bremer
served as special assistant or executive assistant to
six secretaries of state. In 1999, Bremer was
appointed chairman of the National Commission on
Terrorism by House Speaker Dennis Hastert.




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