Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06BAGHDAD75
2006-01-09 13:21:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Baghdad
Cable title:  

ELECTION OBSERVER TEAM STILL AT WORK WHILE

Tags:  PGOV PNAT 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 000075 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/09/2016
TAGS: PGOV PNAT KDEM IZ
SUBJECT: ELECTION OBSERVER TEAM STILL AT WORK WHILE
ELECTION COMMISSION DELAYS PUBLIC TALK ON COMPLAINTS

REF: BAGHDAD 0065

Classified By: Political Counselor Robert S. Ford
for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BAGHDAD 000075

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/09/2016
TAGS: PGOV PNAT KDEM IZ
SUBJECT: ELECTION OBSERVER TEAM STILL AT WORK WHILE
ELECTION COMMISSION DELAYS PUBLIC TALK ON COMPLAINTS

REF: BAGHDAD 0065

Classified By: Political Counselor Robert S. Ford
for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).


1. (C) Summary. The international monitoring team
(IMIE) continues its post-election assessment work,
and has decided that its building workload will
require postponement of its preliminary report about
January 14. Partly as a result of this new date, the
Iraqi election commission (IECI) has decided to
postpone announcing the results of their own
investigations into election complaints until after
the Eid holiday that starts January 10 or 11. The
IMIE team appears to be well received by the political
parties, with the Allawi team expressing satisfaction
with the IMIE work as Allawi looks towards the work of
forming a new government. End summary.

-------------- --------------
IMIE MOVES FORWARD WITH ITS POST-ELECTION ASSESSMENT
-------------- --------------


2. (C) The International Mission for Iraqi Elections
(IMIE) has adjusted the timeline for presenting its
preliminary report, with January 14 as the new target
date. In-country IMIE team coordinator Mazen Chouib
told PolOff on January 9 that the team encountered
more work than expected, and needed more time to pour
over the piles of documents the team obtained from
both the IECI and the various political parties they
have met with during the past week. Chouib insisted
that the date change reflected the level of work; no
one should expect any surprise findings or
announcements on the 14th. He also underlined that
the IMIE's objective was to conduct an assessment of
the complaints process and overall elections
procedures, and not/not to conduct a post-election
investigation. He admitted that this type of work
(i.e. a post-election assessment) was new territory
for IMIE and is not contained in its charter.
However, he expressed confidence that the team members
have the requisite expertise to produce credible
results within the coming weeks.


3. (C) Chouib stated that the two Arab League members
were particularly well-received by the political party
leaders. Identified simply as members of the Arab
League with no mention of nationality, both team

members, Disouki Abaza, an Egyptian and Head of the
Arab Affairs Department, and Ali El Jaroche, a
Lebanese and a Legal Advisor (also a former judge),
have quickly gained the confidence of the Iraqis as
well as the other IMIE team members. Chouib said that
the team has finished its meeting with all major and
several smaller political parties, and will now focus
on documentation review. He revealed that although
the team does not anticipate any new developments
resulting from their assessment, the final report will
likely contain recommendations for a revision of the
IECI legal framework as well as a need for capacity
building in order to address inherent deficiencies in
IECI structure and operations.

--------------
IECI POSTPONES ANNOUNCING COMPLAINTS RESULTS
--------------


4. (C) Earlier in the day, IECI International
Commissioner Craig Jenness told PolOff that the IECI
Board of Directors decided not to announce the final
results of the complaint process at a press conference
previously scheduled for January 9. Instead, Jenness
stated that the announcement will be postponed until
after the Eid holidays and, hopefully, after the IMIE
gives its preliminary report.


5. (C) When Chouib learned about the postponement by
the IECI, he told PolOff that he did not want the work
of the IMIE to interfere in any way with the
activities of the IECI, and assured that the IMIE will
only take the minimum time necessary to complete their
assessment. (Comment: This timing is contrary to IECI
previous statements that their timeline would remain
independent from the IMIE timeline. However, a slight
delay of this announcement is politically more
palatable and should provide for a more positive
respite for all parties during Eid. End comment.)
Chouib estimated that IMIE should have a final report
completed within two to three weeks, and that their
preliminary report should be enough to address the
concerns of the political parties on the fairness and
objectivity of the election process.

--------------
ALLAWI CAMP OPTIMISTIC ABOUT THE IMIE TEAM
--------------


6. (C) On January 8, Ibrahim Al-Janabi, Chief of Staff
to Dr. Ayad Allawi, told PolOffs and PolFSN that key
members of MARAM had previously met with the IMIE team
and provided them extensive documentation on election-
related complaints (ref). He explained that the
information was presented to the team in four specific
election-related stages: one month prior to the
elections, the 24-hour media blackout period prior to
election day, activities during election day, and
actions during the period following the elections.


7. (C) Al-Janabi expressed satisfaction with the level
of expertise on the IMIE team, especially from the
Arab League members, describing the team as good
listeners. He also stated that he does not see a need
to re-run any parts of the election, and that the
formation of government is paramount. He also said
that getting the violations on record by an
independent body would be sufficient enough to move
past the elections.

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


8. (C) As noted ref, we sense that at least some of
the groups arguing most loudly against in the election
results are moderating their tone. Meanwhile, the
IECI Board of Directors is still not fully convinced
about the need for the international IMIE group to
conduct an assessment of the election's technical
aspects. However, the Board accepts the need for the
IMIE assessment to act as a political tool to
complement the apolitical technical work of the ICEI.
The willingness of the IMIE team to craft an
assessment process while giving due consideration to
Iraqi political realities is refreshing and should go
a long way to producing a useful final report. Post
will monitor IMIE's progress closely to ensure that
the timeline for its assessment does not expand, and
to encourage IMIE to focus on its timeline.
KHALILZAD