By Ali Rawaf
To remind you, as soon as the last US soldier stepped
outside the Iraqi borders, things have been going downhill. Today, Maliki's Iraq almost seems as far from democracy as it was
under Saddam Hussein. The PM is on a journey to court as much power into his
hands as possible. The opposition forces continue to lose ground. And the Iraqi
people continue to suffer from poor quality of life.
Soon after the US left, Maliki moved to prosecute his VP for
alleged terrorist activities, a move that reignited sectarian tensions and as
he is being tried in absentia, Iraqis are reminded of the sectarian violence
that they thought was winding down.
Last week, the Minister of Communication resigned after
growing interference from the Prime Minister in moving ministry officials
around with no regards to the minister, who is a member of the same political
entity of the VP. Anonymous sources say that three top leaders from the same
political party have given their support to Maliki, after his perpetual threats
of ousting them from their positions.
Maliki is also in a major political battle with the Kurds.
As Iraq’s oil revenue grows so does the fight between Baghdad and the Kurdish
federal region over oil contracts that are being granted to foreign companies
by the regional government. Maliki’s office says that the central government is
the only one that is authorized to grant such contracts. As a result, foreign
companies are growing more hesitant to do business with Iraq and the Kurds
renewed their calls for secession.
The growing frustrations with Maliki’s politics lead to a
meeting between the major political parties in parliament. They agreed to
question Maliki within the constitutional power the parliament. A day before
Maliki was going to be summoned, a military unit under his command lifted the
belt of concrete blocks that fortify parliament against bomb attacks, a move
that was seen as a threat.
The PM also threatened the parties that if he was going to
be questioned, he would divulge embarrassing secrets about those who question
him. As a result, the efforts to oust him or question him withered.
Iraqi politicians claim that Maliki seems emboldened by the
US lack of interest in Iraqi affairs and an expanding Iranian support. That lack
of involvement from the US and the West will not only cost Iraqis, it will cost
the US interests in the region.
Iraq so far has helped lessen the effects of the US
sanctions against Iran by letting local banks handle Iranian trade transactions
and Iraq is also helping Iran send military supplies support the Syrian regime
through Iraqi airspace.
Despite calls from Iraqi parties, regional and foreign
countries, and US VP Joe Biden to halt both activities, Maliki remains defiant and
those activities still go on.