RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (Full Version)

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sadiq2006 -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/24/2007 10:54:15 AM)

saifali
 
you are right 100% but the iraqi people should keep searching an decent iraqi and loyalty to his country and learn the past mistakes because if the iraqis goes always to america and other government's they will always suffer, because i know that alawi will never care about iraq because he is doing this because of his loss in politics just he wants to be famous again like the other hypocrites iraqi presidents.  




Calm -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/24/2007 4:21:37 PM)

Majority of Iraqi people respect Ayad Allawie, so you Sadiq being an american who changed his religion have no right to tell the Iraqis who they support and who they not.  So give it a rest, change that old scratched record.

In other words Just butt out.....!




sadiq2006 -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/25/2007 12:32:22 PM)

calm

no you are wrong majority of Iraqi people respect respects abdil karaim qasim do you understand calm, so calm it is you just butt out ok.   




Calm -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/25/2007 4:13:21 PM)

And Kasim is dead you idiot. 

DOHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

GROW UP AND HAVE A LIFE.

What did we do to deserve you on this site????





Lion of Babylon -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/25/2007 11:00:06 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Calm

Majority of Iraqi people respect Ayad Allawie, so you Sadiq being an american who changed his religion have no right to tell the Iraqis who they support and who they not. 


I think the above comment is fair given Sadiq2006 continues to claim that he is not an Iraqi. [:D]




Harry -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/27/2007 9:04:45 AM)

Is it عيد ألفطر yet?[:D]




Harry -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/27/2007 9:11:43 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Calm

so you Sadiq being an american who changed his religion have no right to tell the Iraqis who they support and who they not.  So give it a rest, change that old scratched record.

In other words Just butt out.....!


I think he does. Didn’t the Bush administration select the Iraqi interim government members?

The man is doing what Americans do best; force others to live their lives the American way.




sadiq2006 -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/27/2007 7:40:37 PM)

they do not al alawi because he is a nephew of saddam hussain and what he taught himso get a grib of yourself. 




sadiq2006 -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/27/2007 7:42:12 PM)

Mr. calm

they do not want al alawi because he is a nephew of saddam hussain and what he taught himso get a grib of yourself. 




Calm -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/28/2007 1:11:41 AM)

This prove to me that you are beyond repair.  I think its time for you to pack your bags and go.  You have been sent here to destroy this website not by you intelligents far from it, but by your stupidity.  Where on earth do you get your information from?

Dohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh




Harry -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/28/2007 8:24:47 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Calm
Where on earth do you get your information from?


From Dohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhland




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/28/2007 11:28:43 AM)

quote:


From Dohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhland


[sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley14.gif]




saifali -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/28/2007 4:42:32 PM)

دعم سعودي لعلاوي والأخير يؤكد دفع 300 ألف دولار لشركة علاقات عامة امريكية لتلميع صورته السياسية
قالت صحيفة واشنطن بوست ان الادارة الأمريكية غيرت استراتيجيتها في الشرق الأوسط، ولا سيما في علاقتها مع ايران علي نحو تحول فيه العراق من مصدٍّ للنفوذ الايراني في زمن صدام حسين الى ساحة للصراع معها الآن.
ولفت التقرير الي أن الادارة الأمريكية جعلت من سياسة احتواء ايران من أهم أولوياتها في منطقة الشرق الأوسط، وأن الاحتواء قد يشمل العراق في حال سيطرت ايران عليه عبر نفوذها المتزايد هناك.
وربط تقرير واشنطن بوست بين هذا التغيير في الاستراتيجية الأمريكية، وتردد اسم اياد علاوي في هذه الأيام، مشيرا الي أنه علي الرغم من كون علاوي شيعيا، فان رئيس الوزراء العراقي الأسبق صاحب الخلفية البعثية يحظي بدعم كبير من السنة، لافتا الي أن أمواله التي يشتري بها الدعم السياسي لنفسه تأتي من السعودية والامارات، حسب الصحيفة.
وأضاف التقرير أن الاستراتيجية الأمريكية الجديدة تعتمد علي تسليح السعودية ومصر واسرائيل، وتقديم دعم سياسي للأنظمة العربية، فضلا عن تقديم دعم مالي عن طريق أنظمة دول خليجية الي اياد علاوي لمواجهة خصومه في الحكومة.
وأكد تقرير الصحيفة أن واشنطن مضت قدما في سياسة الاحتواء بعد أن تبين لها أن محادثاتها مع الايرانيين في بغداد في الآونة الأخيرة لم تؤد الي وقف تدفق الأسلحة من ايران الي فصائل شيعية استخدمتها لزعزعة استقرار العراق واستهداف الجنود الأمريكيين.
وذكر تقرير واشنطن بوست أن سياسة احتواء ايران تقوم علي استمرار دعم الدول العربية السنية لمواجهتها، لافتا الي أن الولايات المتحدة تقوم بتقوية تحالفها مع السنة داخل العراق للحد من النفوذ الايراني المتزايد هناك.
وأشار التقرير الي أن هذا التحول في الاستراتيجية الأمريكية جاء ليس فقط بعد خيبة أمل واشنطن من الموقف الايراني غير الداعم لاستقرار العراق ، وانما كذلك بسبب ضعف الحكومة العراقية التي يهيمن عليها الشيعة، وبعد اخفاق السياسيين العراقيين الذين وصفهم التقرير بالطائفيين في الاستفادة من زيادة القوات الأمريكية في بلادهم لوقف العنف وتوفير الخدمات.
وانتقد كاتب التقرير تلك الاستراتيجية، قائلا انها أثبتت فشلها عندما طبقت في السابق، مضيفا أن تسليح السعودية لن يؤدي الي ديمومة استقرارها الأمني، كما أن الدعم السياسي للأنظمة العربية الدكتاتورية سيؤدي الي مزيد من الغضب داخل التيارات الاسلامية المتطرفة، وأن احدي ركائزها التي تعتمد علي ابقاء العراق مفتتا ستقود المنطقة الي حالة اضطراب مستديمة.
وكان رئيس الوزراء الأسبق اياد علاوي اقر في لقاء مع شبكة CNN التلفزيونية الأمريكية بالتعاقد مع شركة علاقات عامة أمريكية ضمن خطة لاقناع صناع القرار في واشنطن بتبني خطته السياسية الرامية الي تغيير النظام السياسي، و تشكيل حكومة جديدة علي أساس غير طائفي .
وقال: أنا أريد انقاذ العراق والمهمة الأمريكية فيه، ولهذا أقدمت علي ذلك، لقد استعنا بهذه الشركة للترويج لوجهة نظر العراقيين الوطنيين غير الطائفيين .
وأكد علاوي أنه تم دفع 300 ألف دولار تشمل ستة أشهر، واعتبر أن هذا المبلغ يعد ضئيلا بالمقارنة بما يفعله الآخرون قائلا هذه الأرقام أقل بكثير مما يملكه الاخرون الذين يؤججون الطائفية، انهم يملكون محطات فضائية واذاعات وصحفا ومواقع الكترونية، نحن لا نملك شيئا من هذا، والرجل الذي دفع مبلغ الـ300 ألف دولار هو عراقي، ولا أستطيع الافصاح عن اسمه .
وعما اذا كان تلقي أموالا من السعودية والامارات، كما ذكر بعض المعلقين الأمريكيين، شدد علاوي علي أن الأمر ليس بهذه الدرجة من الدقة وقال: أتمني أن يكون ما يقولونه صحيحا، فنحن بحاجة ماسة الي من يمولنا، لأن منافسينا في العراق يحظون بدعم مالي قوي من أطراف اخري، أما نحن فقد دخلنا الانتخابات بدون أي دعم ما عدا دعم العراقيين الذين آزرونا، ونبحث الان عن دعم مادي لانجاح برنامجنا الوطني لانقاذ العراق والمنطقة، ولكن ما جاء في تعليق الصحف الأمريكية ليس دقيقا .
وقال علاوي انه فقد ثقته بحكومة نوري المالكي وان العملية السياسية الحالية قائمة علي الطائفية ودعم الميليشيات التي تريد أن تحل محل الدولة، ورفض التعاون مع دول المنطقة، ولهذا فقدنا ثقتنا بامكانية أن تقوم هذه الحكومة بانقاذ العراق .
مضيفا لا أريد أن أكون رئيسا للوزراء في ظل نظام طائفي، هذا أمر أرفضه ولا يشرفني، ولكني سأستخدم جميع الامكانيات المتاحة داخل البلاد لتغيير العراق الي دولة غير طائفية مسالمة وديموقراطية تساهم في استقرار المنطقة بأسرها .




Calm -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/29/2007 8:46:27 AM)

That is very interesting thank you.  He only spoke the truth, and thats why i respect him.  I missed his interview on Sunday.




sadiq2006 -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/29/2007 10:07:54 AM)

oh yes and then he will betray his people like the other iraqi puppets and then steal money and ran away just to clear his picture, and to make fool out of people and himself so Mr. calm be sensible and buzz off and live in a real world whether you like it or not and ofcourse he said the truth and like i said just to clear his picture and predent to be nice like the other iraqi politicians do.




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/29/2007 10:35:43 PM)

Dudes, enough of this bullshit. I respect your right to choose any candidate you feel is best suited for the job but simply attacking one candidate (like Alawi) without offering any alternative means you are only here to bad mouth and your posts are contributing nothing to this thread. Alawi is a clever and astute politician who realizes the importance of working the international political arena. We need a leader who understands international politics and not a Mullah toy like Maliki to give us back our most important asset....SECURITY. Quit your moaning and post something constructive for a change.




Harry -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/30/2007 8:47:08 AM)

LOB:

You can't teach an old dog new tricks.[:D][:D][:D]




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (8/30/2007 10:53:37 PM)

You said it bro. Shame there are so many thread spoilers on this forum. Some purely cut and paste without adding any original comment. Others only discuss issues in Arabic as a form of protest against English because "its the language of invaders". Then there are those who accuse members of posting pornography despite there being no evidence to back up their claims. And last but not least, we have Sadiq2006! [:D]




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Alawi might be back in power by Eid Al Fitir! (10/29/2007 11:31:50 PM)

I came across this report today. Its been a while since I followed Allawi's news and was pleased to hear he still has his hat in the ring.

Lobbyist aims to put Allawi back in the Iraqi prime minister's seat

By Elisabeth Bumiller
Published: October 29, 2007

WASHINGTON: In the spring of 2004, Robert Blackwill, then the influential Iraq director on the National Security Council staff, pushed hard to make Ayad Allawi, a tough, secular Shiite with close ties to the CIA, the interim prime minister of Iraq. Blackwill's efforts worked. For the next 10 months, until Allawi's party lost in the Iraqi elections, he was the first prime minister of the newly sovereign nation - America's man in Baghdad.

Now, a little more than three years later, Blackwill is back in the same business: pushing hard to make Allawi prime minister of Iraq again. But this time, Blackwill's powerful lobbying firm, Barbour Griffith & Rogers, is receiving $300,000 over six months from Allawi for Blackwill's work. In the nearly three years since he left the White House, Blackwill has built a thriving business lobbying for the foreign governments, officials and companies he knew as President George W. Bush's deputy national security adviser, as the U.S. ambassador to India and as a veteran of decades in government.

Among his clients are India, Serbia, Taiwan, the Kurdistan Regional Government, the Alfa Bank in Moscow and Thaksin Shinawatra, the former prime minister of Thailand and a billionaire communications tycoon who was ousted in a coup in 2006. Since late 2005, lobbying disclosure reports at the Justice Department show that Blackwill helped bring in fees to Barbour Griffith & Rogers from foreign clients that total more than $11 million. Blackwill's story is hardly an unusual one in Washington, where foreign lobbying has been good business since at least the early 20th century. Edward von Kloberg 3rd, once known in the capital as the lobbyist to dictators, represented Saddam Hussein, Nicolae Ceaucescu of Romania and Mobuto Sese Seko of the former Zaire. "Shame is for sissies," von Kloberg liked to say.

More recently, Turkey has spent millions of dollars on public relations and prominent lobbyists, among them Richard Gephardt of Missouri, the former House majority leader and a Democrat, and former Representative Robert Livingston of Louisiana, a Republican. But Blackwill stands out for his success and for his representation of countries and officials central to Bush's foreign policy. "We have had a long-term relationship with the firm," Qubad Talabani, the Washington representative of the Kurdistan Regional Government, said in an e-mail message. The Kurdistan Regional Government, which has paid Barbour Griffith & Rogers $1.4 million since Blackwill joined the firm's Kurdistan lobbying team in late 2005, is pushing for support in Washington of its oil contracts with foreign companies.

India, which has paid Barbour Griffith & Rogers $1.24 million since Blackwill began lobbying for the country in late 2005, has hired Blackwill, among others, to push for a nuclear deal between the United States and India that has run into resistance in Congress and the Indian Parliament. On April 2, Justice Department filings show, Blackwill met on the issue of U.S.-India relations with R. Nicholas Burns, the under secretary of state for political affairs and the administration's point man on the nuclear deal. Blackwill's firm has also had lobbying contracts, now expired, with the secular National Dialogue Party of Lebanon; the Confederation of Indian Industry; Dubai International Capital, the private equity firm of Dubai's ruler, Sheik Muhammad bin Rashid al-Maktoum; and Eritrea, the nation in the Horn of Africa that the State Department has been threatening to designate a terrorist state for its support of Islamist rebels in Somalia.

Blackwill, who grew up on the Kansas plains and worked in the mid-1970s for Helmut Sonnenfeldt, the counselor to Henry Kissinger, then the secretary of state, is known within the Bush administration for his intellect and irascibility. In India, his tough management style prompted complaints from embassy staff members and a review by the State Department's inspector general. In 2004, he was reprimanded by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, then the national security adviser, after he was accused of abusive behavior toward a State Department secretary when he discovered he did not have a seat on a flight. But Blackwill, who taught for 14 years at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard and has a wily, Kissinger-like ability to cut through layers of government, is also a gifted raconteur who mixes policy, politics and personality in his analysis of issues.

Although Blackwill now works out of Barbour Griffith & Rogers's luxurious Pennsylvania Avenue offices that look out toward the White House, his lobbying visits to former administration colleagues, when he often comes laden with information, are not so different from the conversations he had with them while he was in government, they say. Blackwill might have continued to lobby in relative peace for his foreign clients had it not been for Allawi, who retained Blackwill's services on Aug. 20 and then said six days later on CNN that Barbour Griffith & Rogers had been hired "to help us advocate our views, the views of the nationalistic Iraqis, the nonsectarian Iraqis." Allawi also said his $300,000 bill with the firm was to be paid by a supporter whom he declined to name.

Allawi's contract with Barbour Griffith & Rogers was first disclosed on IraqSlogger, a Web site devoted to Iraq news. The contract, filed with the Justice Department, states that "B.G.R. will provide strategic counsel and representation for and on behalf of Dr. Ayad Allawi before the U.S. government, Congress, media and others." The contract also states that Blackwill would lead the lobbying firm's "core team of professionals" in representing Allawi.

But American officials in Baghdad take a dim view of Allawi's chances to be prime minister again because of the deep resentments he stirred up during his time in office - in 2004 he supported the American assaults on Najaf and Falluja - and his increasingly distant ties to Iraq. Allawi has homes in London and Amman where he spends much of his time. "I appreciated the opportunity to see Dr. Allawi when he was back in Iraq in August-September," Ryan Crocker, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, said through a spokesman this week. "I can only wish he spent more of his time here."

White House officials insist that Blackwill's support of Allawi does not represent administration policy. Although administration officials spent much of the summer criticizing the current Iraqi prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki - in August, Bush publicly acknowledged "a certain level of frustration" with the Iraqi government's failure to unify its warring ethnic factions - the criticism has ceased. Administration officials say they see no viable alternative at this point to Maliki. But that has not stopped Allawi, and Barbour Griffith & Rogers, from pressing his case. Shortly after the contract was signed, the lobbying firm blanketed Washington's congressional staff members and policymakers with e-mail messages on behalf of Allawi describing Maliki's government as a failure.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/...page=2#Scene_1




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