Ayad Allawi, winner of most seats in Iraqi vote, appeals to opponents of religious rule

By Adam Schreck, AP
Friday, March 26, 2010

Iraq’s top vote-getter cuts across sectarian lines

BAGHDAD — He has fought off a machete-wielding assassin believed sent by Saddam Hussein, spent much of his life in exile and was rumored to have personally shot a number of insurgents. Ayad Allawi is a survivor, and he showed it more than ever in Iraq’s parliamentary elections.

Backed by the U.S. as Iraq’s prime minister in 2004, Allawi seemed doomed politically by his American ties when his party was trounced at the polls the next year. But he positioned himself as an alternative to religious-tinged politics, and the election results announced Friday make him the front-runner to be the country’s next prime minister.

Allawi does not easily conform to the sectarian boundaries so often associated with Iraq’s fragile postwar experiment with democracy. A Shiite by birth and a surgeon by training, he is seen by many as the man who can bridge Iraq’s sectarian divide after years of bloodshed that left the country physically and psychologically shattered.

At the same time, he’s also been jokingly referred to as “Saddam without a mustache” by Iraqis who feel the country needs a strong ruler. He did little to dispel the myth that he personally shot insurgents during his brief tenure as Iraq’s first postwar prime minister.

Allawi’s pitch was for a broad coalition centered on national identity rather than religious sect. Perceived ties of religious Shiite coalitions to neighboring Iran have alarmed many urban and educated Iraqis.

“He is a secular nationalist, far different from the Shiite Islamists. And this appealed to most Sunnis and smaller Shiite constituencies,” said Michael Hanna, a Middle East analyst at the Century Foundation. “He became a vehicle for Sunni and other secularist expression.”

Despite being a Shiite, Allawi has long called for a greater say for the Sunni minority that ran Iraq for decades until the U.S. invasion in 2003. A former member of Saddam’s Baath party, he survived an assassination attempt believed to have been ordered by the then-ruler and went on to establish an opposition group aimed at overthrowing Saddam’s government.

During this year’s campaign, Allawi allied himself with prominent Sunni leader Saleh al-Mutlaq, who like Allawi is a vocal critic of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Al-Mutlaq was eventually barred from running along with some 500 other candidates because of alleged ties to the now-outlawed Baath party — a move that many Sunnis felt was aimed at disenfranchising them.

Allawi’s tenure as prime minister was marked by allegations of widespread corruption, and he was criticized during his parliamentary term for failing to show up to sessions.

During the election campaign he was criticized for spending time outside the country in such places as Saudi Arabia, where his warm welcome was cited as a signal that an Allawi-run government would be met with wide support in the Sunni Arab world. Many in the region have shunned al-Maliki’s government, fearing a Shiite-led country with ties to Iran.

A fluent English speaker, Allawi has kept his family in London instead of bringing them to Baghdad for fear of assassination attempts. While supporters were ecstatic on the streets of Sunni neighborhoods in Baghdad, the atmosphere at his headquarters was a mix of jubilation and tension as armed guards in camouflage uniforms encircled the area in vehicles. Many fired into the air in celebratory gunfire.

“He is the rescuer of Iraqis from their bad situation. He has a popular platform, which was built by his meetings with different types of people from all Iraqi cities … from the south to the north of the country,” said supporter Salah Hamadi, who lives in eastern Baghdad.

Allawi was elected by Iraq’s governing council, set up by the U.S. after the invasion. He has sought to downplay that relationship and distance himself from widely reported ties to Britain’s MI6 intelligence service the CIA during Saddam’s rule. Allawi’s Iraqi National Accord, like a number of anti-Saddam groups, maintained relationships with the CIA and State Department in the years before the U.S. invasion.

He headed Iraq’s interim government from June 2004 until April 2005, after his party was defeated by Shiite parties in parliamentary elections. His electoral list came in a distant third in that race, garnering just 40 seats compared with the 140 won by a Shiite-dominated alliance.

Allawi’s backing of the U.S. offensives to take back the Sunni city of Fallujah in Anbar province in 2004 and against the Mahdi Army of anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr in Najaf won him animosity across the Iraqi religious spectrum.

But those battles are now viewed by many supporters as a sign that he will not play favorites in cracking down on sectarian conflict.

He has also won support from a broad range of Iraqis for his desire to break from the religious parties that have largely dominated postwar Iraq, and for his calls for greater political reform aimed at fostering reconciliation between Sunnis and Shiites.

“Ayad Allawi is secular, moderate and not extremist. … He is an acceptable figure to most Iraqis, who hope he brings change to Iraq,” said Mahir Ahmed, a teacher and Allawi supporter who lives in Baghdad.

Associated Press writers Rebecca Santana and Katarina Kratovac contributed reporting.

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