Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05BAGHDAD4830
2005-12-03 14:51:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Baghdad
Cable title:  

SUNNI OUTREACH: IECI COMMISSIONER VISITS RAMADI

Tags:  PNAT PGOV PTER KDEM IZ 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BAGHDAD 004830 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/03/2015
TAGS: PNAT PGOV PTER KDEM IZ
SUBJECT: SUNNI OUTREACH: IECI COMMISSIONER VISITS RAMADI

Classified By: ACTING POLITICAL COUNSELOR MICHAEL J. ADLER
FOR REASONS 1.4 (B) AND (D).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BAGHDAD 004830

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/03/2015
TAGS: PNAT PGOV PTER KDEM IZ
SUBJECT: SUNNI OUTREACH: IECI COMMISSIONER VISITS RAMADI

Classified By: ACTING POLITICAL COUNSELOR MICHAEL J. ADLER
FOR REASONS 1.4 (B) AND (D).


1. (C) Summary: IECI Commissioner and Chief Electoral
Officer Adel al-Ami visited Ramadi December 1 to discuss
preparations for the upcoming elections. In a joint
meeting with coalition forces (CF),the governor, local
leaders, and representatives from IFES and the NGO Iraqi
Institute for Peace, the following operational topics were
addressed: number and location of polling centers; origin
and training of electoral staff; the roles of CF, Iraqi
security forces (ISF) and tribes in providing security for
polling sites; and how to facilitate voting by persons
internally displaced by fighting. Following Al-Ami's
departure, CF returned to the topic of security with the
local leaders and governor (see ref A and septel). CF,
IECI Commissioner Craig Jeness, IFES, and State met
December 2 to review the outcome of the Ramadi discussion;
a follow-up meeting in Baghdad on election logistics
between 2nd Marine Division's Assistant Division Commander
General Williams and the IECI al-Ami is scheduled for
December 4. All parties are committed to increasing Sunni
engagement in the political process, but the challenging
security environment has handicapped planning for the
elections. End Summary.


2. (C) As part of IECI's MNF-I and Embassy-supported
Sunni Arab outreach campaign, Commissioner and Chief
Electoral Officer Adel al-Ami traveled to Ramadi December
1, via milair and accompanied by representatives from IFES,
State, and USAID. The party joined Anbar CF and SET
officer in the offices of Governor Ma'moon Sami Rasheed.
Local leaders, who attended the meeting to discuss security
matters with CF, joined the elections discussion, as did a
Baghdad-based representative of the Iraqi Institute for
Peace (or IIP, which is assisting IECI in hiring
provincially-based staff to administer the elections).

Sites and Staffing


3. (C) The governor forcefully lobbied al-Ami for a larger
number of polling centers (or, sites) in residential
neighborhoods and the employment of Anbaris to staff the
polling sites. The local leaders supported these points.

In response to a proposed CF plan for election day that
involved limited movement of vehicles, the Iraqis said they
preferred a ban on traffic on December 15, arguing it would
be safer and reasoning that the importance of the election
justified the inconvenience. There was a fruitful exchange
on desired locations of polling sites in Ramadi, and a
commitment to address finalizing the site locations for the
rest of al-Anbar province in a follow-up meeting in Baghdad
December 4.


4. (C) The question of local staff proved more
problematic. While all agreed it was preferable to hire
local staff, in part as a means of increasing Sunni
participation in the elections, the group was unable to
agree on the mechanics of identifying, hiring, and training
the staff -- given the short time frame and security
concerns. The governor's resistance to the proposed IIP
role in recruiting local staff, and his apparent mistrust
of an unfamiliar organization represented by an outsider,
was echoed by senior sheikh Anwar al-Kharbit, who grilled
the NGO representative: "Who is the founder of your
organization? Where are you from? We know nothing about
you." (Note: IFES subsequently informed us that IIP had
briefed the governor's aides on its plans, which included a
list of 6,750 local names.) In a December 2 meeting in
Baghdad, IECI Craig Jeness and IFES Jeff Fischer
acknowledged IIP shortcomings to CF and State, but said
that they believe this NGO is the only organization that
can organize the hiring of impartial local staff. It was
agreed to revisit this issue with Anbar leadership.

Sunni Concerns


5. (C) The governor and local leaders pressed for a lead
role by Iraqi security forces in providing security on
election day. Commander of Second Marine Division's 2BCT,
Colonel Gronski, explained that the ISF would be the
security face at polling sites, and that CF would provide
perimeter, QRF and other support. The governor insisted
that the election be a "test" of ISF capability. General
Williams urged local leaders to encourage the men in their
community to respond to recruiting efforts and join the ISF
to increase its force size in Anbar. Colonel Gronski asked
if the tribes were willing to provide security for polling
sites in Ramadi; several of the tribal leaders said it was
absolutely not possible. When pressed by PolOff, they
demurred, arguing they wanted to avoid potential intra-
tribal feuds and association with CF. (Note: Some tribes
in western Anbar, however, have offered to provide sole
security for polling sites in their area.) PolOff
explained that the election was a critical step in
addressing Sunni concerns; the Sunni voice from Anbar must
become part of the new national government in order to play
a role in determining Iraq's security policy; therefore,
the tribal leaders should urge their communities to vote
and act responsibly on December 15. The local leaders
urged CF to decrease military operations in the run-up to
the elections, and complained to PolOff about the traffic
of armoured vehicles in Ramadi.


6. (C) The governor raised the issue of internally
displaced persons, claiming that a large number of Anbar
residents who had been displaced by military operations
feared they would not be permitted to vote. (Note: The
IECI, which informally permitted Anbaris to vote at any
location during the October referendum, is considering
issuing a statement to that effect in Anbar province with
regards to the December 15 election, although weighing the
fact that such a gesture to the Sunni Arab community in
Anbar could open the IECI up to charges of fraud.) He also
asked about the right of detainees to vote. The local
leaders complained that the number of representatives from
Anbar to the new assembly had been decreased from Saddam's
time, and blamed this fact on the "American project" to
disenfranchise the Sunni community. Al-Ami explained how
the TNA had developed and adopted the electoral law. He
also provided a robust defense of the independence of the
IECI, and stressed to the local leaders the importance of a
large Sunni turnout at the election.
KHALILZAD