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Americans choose an Iraqi figure to be the new Prime Minister of Iraq to replace the slaves!


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Americans choose an Iraqi figure to be the new Prime Minister of Iraq to replace the slaves!

17-08-2017 01:35 PM
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Baghdad News -

 

 

The US Embassy in Iraq revealed the candidate of the Ministry of Defense to the next prime minister Hajim Husseini and directly supported by the government to succeed Abadi. 

"One of the officials with close ties to the embassy said that Hajim al-Hassani was the one who signed the nomination by the leaders of the US Department of Defense and confirmed that they will try to persuade the White House and the Pentagon as well as the Congress to support this candidacy and appoint him as prime minister. Taking office next year, which is known as the share of the Shiite National Alliance '. 

Al-Husseini received many posts after 2003, including an industry minister and speaker of the Islamist party, one of his active members, as well as a candidate for defense minister in earlier times.

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Informed sources reveal the names of the characters chosen by "Maliki" to compete "Abadi" in the upcoming elections

17-08-2017 02:34 PM
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Baghdad News -

 

 

The sources revealed on Thursday that there is a 'mobility' within the coalition of state law, led by the current Vice President and former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, pointing out that the latter tends to nominate the current Labor Minister Mohammed Shiaa Sudanese or former leader of the Supreme Council Adel Abdul Mahdi To compete with Prime Minister Haider Abadi during the upcoming elections. 

Al-Sharq al-Awsat newspaper quoted unnamed sources as saying that "the atmosphere of anticipation is the ruling within the coalition of state law and the Dawa Party, which belongs to both Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi and Vice-President Nuri al-Maliki, where they want to see his colleague outside the walls of the Dawa Party, Of the complexity expected, on the presidency of the next electoral blocs, where not accept any of them but to be president of the electoral bloc '. 

According to the newspaper, Maliki is seeking to lead a broad coalition, its task of making a new prime minister controlled by Maliki, and that the latter, tends to nominate the current Labor Minister Mohammed Shi'a Sudanese or former leader of the Supreme Council Adel Abdul Mahdi. 

"The newspaper quoted a source close to the rule of law is likely to exit independent of the coalition, because its leader Hussein al-Shahristani dissatisfied with the (state law) because of the lack of defense of its members after losing the post of Ministry of Higher Education in July, 2016. 

Sources of the Sadrist movement, confirmed to the Middle East 'the desire of the leader of the Sadrist movement Moqtada al-Sadr to participate in a list of cross-sectarian, Sadr has said on more than one occasion not to oppose the alliance with Iyad Allawi and the stream of wisdom, led by Ammar al-Hakim'. 

A source of the civil current confirmed to the Middle East, that ' The primary work on which most of the political forces, especially Moqtada al-Sadr, who has good relations with the civil stream, is to get a large percentage of seats in the upcoming elections to bring about the required change. 

The source, who preferred not to be named, said that 'without containing the influence of Nuri al-Maliki in the next elections, there is no way to reform the situation,' noting that 'this is possible in the case of the establishment of a good electoral coalition, because Maliki's electoral chances are no longer as they were previously after losing Prime minister. '

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I hope this is a load of crap. The last two times we picked someone to lead Iraq, we gave them Saddam Hussein and then Nouri al Maliki. Our friggen government always picks the guy who tells them what they want to hear, then, well, look where we're at now. I'm all for letting them do this on their own with regard to holding a free and fair election. 

 

When you boil boil it all down to brass tacks, if we impose our will on their political process to put in who WE want, what makes That any different than what Iran is trying to do?

 

I'm all for Al Abadi, and if we don't back him wholeheartedly I'm going to be pissed. He is the one guy who truly earned the right to lead that country for four more years. I mean jeez, just look at the picture of that guy, he's got jowels. And where the hell was that guy during the last three years when Abadi was fighting the uphill battle to where they are now? 

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19 minutes ago, nannab said:

Who is this bozo anyway? I don't remember seeing his name before regarding PM. 

Abadi is doing a stellar job with what he was handed.  

 

Good question nannab and agreed on the amazing job Abadi is doing cleaning up after decades of political and religious infighting and corruption. It must be the Russians again....LOL !!!

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Maybe this person is introduced to the voting mix to take away votes from Nouri al-Maliki if Nouri al-Maliki chooses to run for the PM again in the elections to effectively guarantee Nouri al-Maliki will not be PM of Iraq ever again. Hopefully this person is in no way affiliated with Nouri al-Maliki. All in all, I suspect Abadi has the upper hand now and will continue to have the upper hand unless something sets Iraq back. With the potential IQD revaluation, that could really tip things in Abadi's favor 'cause, "It's the economy, Stupid???!!!"

 

This could also be a "shot over the bow" from the US to Abadi, et al to get the SHOW ON THE ROAD - YEAH, BABY!!! With the "Caretaker Gubmint" proposed for September 21, 2017, there could be pressure mounting on the various functions of the Gubmint Of Iraq (GOI) to get off their keesters and git 'er dun or else ole Donald will come back and give them a Royal, er, whatever ole Donald thinks they need to git 'er dun!!!

 

Go Moola Nova!!!

:pirateship:

 

 

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Hajim al-Hassani may have been voted in as speaker of Iraq's parliament more because of who he is not, rather than who he is.

The grey-bearded 50-year-old took the position reserved for a Sunni Arab by a large majority of 215 votes out of 241 deputies present. 

He was one of only two Sunni Arab MPs who were acceptable for the high profile, but largely powerless post. 

The rest were either members of the Shia list - or had connections with the former Saddam Hussein regime which was unacceptable to Shia deputies who hold a majority in the parliament. 

The only other possible candidate - outgoing President Ghazi Yawer - had ruled himself out. 

Exile

Born in Kirkuk and a graduate of Mosul university, Mr Hassani moved to the United States in 1979 and spent most of his working life there. 

 

o.gif
start_quote_rb.gifYou should be part of the suffering of your people... who suffer from power outages and water shortages... part of their suffering in facing terrorismend_quote_rb.gif
Hajim al-Hassani

 

He has degrees in agriculture and economics from the universities of Nebraska and Connecticut. 

He then spent 12 years working in Los Angeles, where he became head of an investment and trading company. 

During that time he became an activist in the anti-Saddam opposition and rose through the ranks of the Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP) rooted in the Muslim Brotherhood movement. 

In 2003, he returned to his homeland after the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam and took up a deputy post in the Iraqi Governing Council. 

During that time, the IIP emerged as a strong force in the restive Sunni province of al-Anbar and Mr Hassani helped negotiate an unsuccessful truce with the insurgents of Falluja which held until April 2004. 

Insurgency

Mr Hassani was appointed industry minister in the interim government of Iyad Allawi that was set up after the US handed sovereignty back to Iraqi hands in June 2004. 

 

Votes being counted for speaker of parliament
Hassani won with a vote of 215 in the 275-seat chamber

 

But his ministry's privatisation programme has failed to revive Iraq's economy which remains crippled by the anti US-insurgency. 

And he provoked outright anger from many of his Sunni co-religionists when he backed the US-led assault on Falluja late in 2004. 

The IIP resigned from the government and Mr Hassani chose to be banished from his party while he stayed on in his ministerial position. 

He later helped with the distribution of humanitarian aid and reconstruction in the devastated city after the assault on Falluja was over. 

Sectarian differences

Mr Hassani is considered an outsider by most Sunni Arabs, but as an Islamist - if a moderate one - his is also viewed with suspicion by the secular Shia tradition represented by Mr Allawi and his supporters. 

Analysts say he may not be unifying figure that is needed to heal rifts after the rancorous process that led to his election - a process that was intended to be a mere formality. 

 

Hajim Hassani
Hassani has been expelled from the Iraqi Islamic Party

Nor - after the Falluja schism - is he best placed to persuade disillusioned Sunni Arabs to resist the insurgency and rally behind the new government  - Sunnis make up about 20% of the Iraqi population, but because of a wide-scale boycott and fears of violence during polling, they hold only about 5% of parliamentary seats. 

 

However, in his new role Mr Hassani has signalled as desire to heal sectarian and ethnic differences and put the people's needs first. 

"The Kurd has put his hand in the Arab's hand and the Shia has taken the Sunni's hand so they could all walk side-by-side along with their Christian and Turkmen brothers," he said in his acceptance speech. 

And he warned MPs: "You should be part of the suffering of your people... who suffer from power cuts and water shortages... part of their suffering in facing terrorism".

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1 hour ago, Floridian said:

Hajim al-Hassani may have been voted in as speaker of Iraq's parliament more because of who he is not, rather than who he is.

The grey-bearded 50-year-old took the position reserved for a Sunni Arab by a large majority of 215 votes out of 241 deputies present. 

He was one of only two Sunni Arab MPs who were acceptable for the high profile, but largely powerless post. 

The rest were either members of the Shia list - or had connections with the former Saddam Hussein regime which was unacceptable to Shia deputies who hold a majority in the parliament. 

The only other possible candidate - outgoing President Ghazi Yawer - had ruled himself out. 

Exile

Born in Kirkuk and a graduate of Mosul university, Mr Hassani moved to the United States in 1979 and spent most of his working life there. 

 

o.gif
start_quote_rb.gifYou should be part of the suffering of your people... who suffer from power outages and water shortages... part of their suffering in facing terrorismend_quote_rb.gif
Hajim al-Hassani

 

He has degrees in agriculture and economics from the universities of Nebraska and Connecticut. 

He then spent 12 years working in Los Angeles, where he became head of an investment and trading company. 

During that time he became an activist in the anti-Saddam opposition and rose through the ranks of the Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP) rooted in the Muslim Brotherhood movement. 

In 2003, he returned to his homeland after the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam and took up a deputy post in the Iraqi Governing Council. 

During that time, the IIP emerged as a strong force in the restive Sunni province of al-Anbar and Mr Hassani helped negotiate an unsuccessful truce with the insurgents of Falluja which held until April 2004. 

Insurgency

Mr Hassani was appointed industry minister in the interim government of Iyad Allawi that was set up after the US handed sovereignty back to Iraqi hands in June 2004. 

 

Votes being counted for speaker of parliament
Hassani won with a vote of 215 in the 275-seat chamber

 

But his ministry's privatisation programme has failed to revive Iraq's economy which remains crippled by the anti US-insurgency. 

And he provoked outright anger from many of his Sunni co-religionists when he backed the US-led assault on Falluja late in 2004. 

The IIP resigned from the government and Mr Hassani chose to be banished from his party while he stayed on in his ministerial position. 

He later helped with the distribution of humanitarian aid and reconstruction in the devastated city after the assault on Falluja was over. 

Sectarian differences

Mr Hassani is considered an outsider by most Sunni Arabs, but as an Islamist - if a moderate one - his is also viewed with suspicion by the secular Shia tradition represented by Mr Allawi and his supporters. 

Analysts say he may not be unifying figure that is needed to heal rifts after the rancorous process that led to his election - a process that was intended to be a mere formality. 

 

Hajim Hassani
Hassani has been expelled from the Iraqi Islamic Party

Nor - after the Falluja schism - is he best placed to persuade disillusioned Sunni Arabs to resist the insurgency and rally behind the new government  - Sunnis make up about 20% of the Iraqi population, but because of a wide-scale boycott and fears of violence during polling, they hold only about 5% of parliamentary seats. 

 

However, in his new role Mr Hassani has signalled as desire to heal sectarian and ethnic differences and put the people's needs first. 

"The Kurd has put his hand in the Arab's hand and the Shia has taken the Sunni's hand so they could all walk side-by-side along with their Christian and Turkmen brothers," he said in his acceptance speech. 

And he warned MPs: "You should be part of the suffering of your people... who suffer from power cuts and water shortages... part of their suffering in facing terrorism".

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45 minutes ago, nannab said:

Floridian who is Mrs. Classy?

 

A Newshound On People's-Dinar (SteveI's Site) Who Presumably Took Millionday's Place ! ;) 

 

 

Mrs Classy Also Always Says Excuse Me After Belching Or Passing Gas ! :o 

 

:D  :D  :D 

 

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3 hours ago, DinarThug said:

 

A Newshound On People's-Dinar (SteveI's Site) Who Presumably Took Millionday's Place ! ;) 

 

 

Mrs Classy Also Always Says Excuse Me After Belching Or Passing Gas ! :o 

 

:D  :D  :D 

 

 

Oh!  That's awful.  She seems like a nice lady and posts a lot of articles over there.

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3 hours ago, DinarThug said:

 

A Newshound On People's-Dinar (SteveI's Site) Who Presumably Took Millionday's Place ! ;) 

 

 

Mrs Classy Also Always Says Excuse Me After Belching Or Passing Gas ! :o 

 

:D  :D  :D 

 

 

LOL  So possible triplet's Mrs. Classy, Tacky and Wacky ? That splains it Lucy.

Too funny Thuggy. I have never been to another site I fit quite well with this bunch of crazy's. :lmao:

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22 hours ago, Synopsis said:

This could also be a "shot over the bow" from the US to Abadi, et al to get the SHOW ON THE ROAD - YEAH, BABY!!!

Hoping your right, I would have to agree!! Thanks Synopsis

 

12 hours ago, nannab said:

I have never been to another site

Your not the only one. Seem those other site cause misleading hype and big let downs everyday, from what I see from a few here...IMO:rake:

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This would be political foolery if the US throws it's backing behind someone else in 2018 elections. Abadi has proven worthy, facing up to Maliki and his cronies. They don't do things in Iraq like we do in the US. And if Sadr, Hakim, Alawi link arms then the US should aid and assist if they chose to push Abadi forward for another 4 years. An indictment against Maliki before election rhetoric gets to full speed would greatly help Abadi. Fingers crossed. Abadi inherited a huge mess of a country, let him do his job. What we should be hoping for is a clean sweep of their parliament.

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21 minutes ago, King Bean said:

This would be political foolery if the US throws it's backing behind someone else in 2018 elections. Abadi has proven worthy, facing up to Maliki and his cronies. They don't do things in Iraq like we do in the US. And if Sadr, Hakim, Alawi link arms then the US should aid and assist if they chose to push Abadi forward for another 4 years. An indictment against Maliki before election rhetoric gets to full speed would greatly help Abadi. Fingers crossed. Abadi inherited a huge mess of a country, let him do his job. What we should be hoping for is a clean sweep of their parliament.

KB,  Excellent points and yes most certainly agree....:)

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