Identifier | Created | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|
03KUWAIT2957 | 2003-07-03 10:42:00 | UNCLASSIFIED | Embassy Kuwait |
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available. |
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 KUWAIT 002957 |
1. SUMMARY: The parliamentary elections to be held on July 5 dominate the news pages. One candidate believes that "embassies buy individuals and have pushed them to run in the election to serve their interests," while an Islamist candidate rails against "secularists trying to tamper with our educational curricula." In his session closing remarks, National Assembly Speaker Jassem Al-Kharafi stressed the need for continued reform and "fast and daring decisions" to confront the "economic and security challenges" facing Kuwait. Commentators opine on the recent series of attacks on US troops in Iraq, with one believing the attacks to be a manifestation of general Arab hostility towards America, while another feels their importance should not be exaggerated as they represent "sabotage and not resistance." One writer argues that the US did not enter Afghanistan and Iraq for the betterment of their peoples but rather to "cement Zionist military superiority." Another finds the idea of donations to the families of coalition forces killed in Iraq "immoral." END SUMMARY. 2. News Stories: National Assembly Speaker Jassem Al- Kharafi stated in his speech at the last session of the Assembly before the July 5 parliamentary elections that Kuwait is facing "security and economic challenges that need to be addressed by fast and daring decisions and deepening efforts for reform in the state and the society," Al-Qabas reports on its July 2 front page. Al-Rai Al-Aam reports on its July 1st front page that the conservative Islamist Salafi Movement are concerned that too many Islamist candidates may divide the vote and have negative effects on Islamist representation in the new National Assembly. Al-Qabas reports comments by National Assembly candidate Abdullah Al-Rejaib saying that, "embassies buy individuals and have pushed them to run in the election to serve their interests." Al-Watan reports that one Islamist National Assembly candidate has declared: "Secularists are trying to tamper with our educational curricula and we have to stand up against their Westernized objectives." Al-Qabas reports that a Congressional delegation led by Senator John Warner visiting Kuwait and Iraq "hailed Kuwait's role in the liberation of Iraq." Editorials: 3. "When Morals Disappear" Dr. Yaser Al-Saleh wrote in independent Al-Rai Al-Aam (7/01): "[T]he majority of Arabs believe the main reason behind the American invasion of Iraq, is to control Iraq's oil and thus accomplish the goals of the Zionist entity. This spirit of hostility also manifests itself in Iraq where resistance operations against the coalition forces are carried out on daily basis. Despite this, some here refer to [the coalition forces] as the forces of liberation, to the extent of collecting money for the families of the occupying forces killed in Iraq instead of spending on the needy here. What morals!" 4. "In the Right Direction" Dr. Yacoub Al-Sharrah wrote in independent Al-Rai Al-Aam (7/01): "We call on the Iraqis to embrace this golden opportunity offered to them by the coalition, to build a new democratic nucleus so that Iraq may rapidly join the international community. It is a sensible state which protects the interests of its people by following a wise and even-minded policy and does not take the path of confrontation and destructive challenge which eventually leads nowhere." 5. "History is not a Tea Party" Dr. Abdullah Al-Nafisi wrote in independent Al-Watan (7/02): "It is wrong to believe that the United States or the West came to Kabul or Baghdad to turn us from defeat to victory, backwardness to progress, and stagnation to development. The Western coalition is keen to cement Zionist military superiority, supplying them with WMD, at the same time stripping Arabs of such weapons and accusing them of being a threat to world peace, as events in Iraq have shown." 6. "Sabotage and Not Resistance" Pan-Arabist editor-in-chief Ahmed Al-Jarallah wrote in independent Al-Seyassah (7/02): "There is no need to exaggerate armed attacks against America troops in Iraq. The situation is similar to events taking place in Afghanistan, where [Baathist] remnant groups attempt to prove themselves through desperate attacks. Iraq will not be another Somalia for Americans. These remnants seek to delay the course of reconstruction and development in Iraq. Those who obstruct the reconstruction program by the United States will soon realize that Americans are capable of uprooting these groups." JONES |