Iraqi Election Catapults
Critic Of U.S. To Power
By T. Christian
Miller
15 February, 2005
Los
Angeles Times
BAGHDAD
The triumph of a Shiite Muslim slate in Iraq's national elections is
a victory for one of the nation's most enigmatic figures and a consistent
critic of U.S. policy: senior cleric Abdelaziz Hakim.
Hakim leads the
Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, the most powerful
party on the United Iraqi Alliance slate, which claimed about half the
seats in the transitional National Assembly.
Though he is listed as the top candidate on the alliance's election
list and will have a seat in the assembly, Hakim has ruled out holding
a leadership position such as president or prime minister. It is widely
believed, however, that he will exert powerful influence over whomever
is selected to lead Iraq.
That has left many
in the U.S. and Iraq anxious about Hakim, a soft-spoken man who worked
closely with Iranian officials during nearly 20 years as an exiled militia
leader opposed to Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
Over the decades,
Hakim has consistently declared himself in favor of democratic elections,
but he has been guarded about his precise vision for Iraq's government.
For instance, when pressed in a recent television interview on whether
Islam should be the source of law in Iraq, Hakim demurred, professing
a desire for comity and dialogue.
"Maybe this
or another thing," said Hakim, a diminutive figure who typically
wears a dark robe and a black turban indicating direct descent from
the Prophet Muhammad. "Everything is to be discussed and all made
satisfied."
In many ways, Sunday's
triumph for the United Iraqi Alliance is a victory of perseverance for
Hakim, who fled Iraq about 25 years ago.
Hakim hails from
a long line of powerful, respected clerics in Iraq's southern Shiite
heartland. The family was relentlessly persecuted by Hussein and his
fellow Sunni Muslims in the Baath Party; Hakim has said that Hussein's
government killed more than 60 of his relatives over the years.
For most of his
time in exile in Iran, Hakim stood in the shadow of his elder half-brother,
Mohammed Bakr Hakim, who turned the Supreme Council into a powerful
opposition group. During the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War, the Badr Brigade,
led by the younger Hakim, harassed Iraqi troops from his base in Iran.
Some Iraqi prisoners of war accused the group of torture.
Through the 1980s
and 1990s, Hakim was active in the byzantine array of competing opposition
groups seeking to overthrow Hussein. But unlike other exiled leaders
such as interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi or Ahmad Chalabi, who aligned
themselves with American allies, Hakim frequently opposed the United
States.
He argued against
a U.S.-led attack against Iraq after Hussein's invasion of Kuwait in
1990, saying it would only inflame Arab passions and remove focus from
overthrowing the dictator.
The U.S. literally
shut Hakim out of the tent during an early attempt to form a government
after Hussein's ouster in the U.S.-led invasion of 2003. As U.S. leaders
met with handpicked Iraqi leaders in an air-conditioned tent in Iraq
that April, Hakim stood outside with his followers, protesting that
Iraqis not Americans should choose an interim government.
"Anything other
than this tramples on the rights of the Iraqi people," he told
the Washington Post.
Hakim's brother
later made a triumphant return to Iraq, and was seen as a future leader.
But in August 2003 he was killed in a massive car bomb outside the holiest
site in Shiite Islam, the Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf.
Hakim stepped in
to take his brother's place. Although considered young he is
believed to be in his mid-50s he has won widespread support.
He developed a close
relationship with Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the most powerful Shiite
cleric in Iraq.
A follower of the
so-called quietest school, Sistani believes that clerics should not
participate directly in politics. Thus, his communications with U.S.
officials have often been through Hakim, now one of Sistani's closest
allies.
In January 2004,
Hakim met with President Bush in Washington to discuss the timetable
for elections in Iraq. Without specifying a date for U.S. troops to
leave Iraq, Hakim has said he would seek to negotiate a schedule for
their departure.
In recent days,
Hakim seemed to launch a public relations offensive, giving interviews
to a series of media outlets. He repeatedly denied that he took instructions
from Iran, and said he was open to working with all of Iraq's different
ethnic and political groups.
However, he cautioned
that Iraq must remain an Islamic state, with laws that do not contradict
Islamic teachings a nuanced position that does not insist on
a theocracy but allows room for religion to play a major role in politics.
"As Iraqis,
we have to look to Iraq," Hakim said in the recent television interview.
"We are not
calling for a theocratic government because we have such pluralism."
© Copyright
2005 Cox News Service