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    Chalabi, Who Championed Iraq WMD Claims, To Give Speech On Democracy In Iraq

    Chalabi, who championed Iraq WMD claims, to give speech on democracy in Iraq

    http://rawstory.com/news/2005/Chalab...aims_1103.html

    (Gold9472: This man is known to be a CIA Asset.)

    11/3/2005

    Deputy Iraqi Prime Minister Ahmed Chalabi, one of the most vociferous proponents of claims that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction, will give a speech on democratic politics in Iraq next Wednesday, RAW STORY has learned.

    The speech, titled "An Insider's View: Democratic Politics at Work in Iraq," is being sponsored by the conservative American Enterprise Institute.

    Individuals can register online at the AEI website. It will be held at the AEI building Wednesday, Nov. 9, at 2:30 PM.

    Details from their website follow.

    Wohlstetter Conference Center , Twelfth Floor, AEI 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 Directions to AEI

    In the last year, Iraqis successfully elected a transitional government and overwhelmingly approved a new constitution. Despite continuing security challenges and a deepening sectarian divide, Iraqis are moving toward a functioning democracy. And while sectors of Iraq continue to lag, there is an untold story of economic reform.

    Will the constitution provide the foundation for a democratic system that can be a model for the Middle East? What can be expected of the upcoming December parliamentary elections? Is Iraq moving beyond sectarian politics, or does the federalism model in the new constitution deepen the divide?

    To address these and other issues, AEI welcomes Ahmad Chalabi, deputy prime minister of Iraq, to deliver his first public speech in the United States in more than two and a half years.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  2. #2
    beltman713 Guest
    More like CIA ass!

  3. #3
    Partridge Guest
    Chalabi announces intentions to play role in Iraq's political process
    The Independent


    The man chiefly responsible for supplying the ‘weapons of mass destruction’ excuse for the Iraq invasion, Ahmad Chalabi, has once again announced his intentions to play a pivotal role in the country’s political process.

    Mr Chalabi has launched his National Iraqi Congress alliance, List 569, for the December election in alliance with Sharif Ali, a cousin of former King Feisal II, who is running on a monarchist ticket. On a wider basis he is also making overtures to the radical Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and the Shia Fadillah Party.

    The manoeuvres by Mr Chalabi to become Iraq’s new prime minister will take him next to Washington, where he will meet a number of senior administration figures including Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, Treasury Secretary John Snow and National Security Advisor John Snow.

    Also there to welcome him back into the fold will be his influential backers among the neo-conservatives, who he had helped so much with their grand plan for starting the Iraq war by providing ‘defectors’ who ‘revealed’ that Saddam Hussein had an arsenal of chemical and biological weapons.

    For the short, rotund and sharply dressed Mr Chalabi, this has been a remarkable reversal of fortune. Flown into Iraq in an USAF plane as Washington’s choice as Iraq’s post-Saddam leader, he quickly fell out with his American sponsors.

    As it became increasingly obvious that no weapons of mass destruction were to be found, American officials turned on Mr Chalabi. His reaction was to say: “We are heroes in error. As far as we’ve been concerned we’ve been entirely successful. That tyrant Saddam has gone and the Americans are in Baghdad. What was said before was not important. The Bush administration is looking for a scapegoat.”

    The nadir in the relationship came when the US accused him of spying for Iran and his Baghdad offices were raided. But since then Mr Chalabi has once again reinvented himself, cutting links with the ruling Shia alliance which has strong links with Tehran and declaring that he is a moderate.

    The Bush administration, buffeted by sectarian confrontations over the new constitution, has quietly reopened channels with Mr Chalabi. Its allowance of his first visit to Washington in more than two years is widely seen as America once again giving a stamp of approval to his actions.


    Mr Chalabi, who was sentenced to 22 years by a Jordanian court in absentia for an alleged $ 70 million bank fraud, launched his campaign at the exclusive Hunting Club, a former haunt of the Baathist elite.

    His first press conference held there, guarded by American troops, a few days after the fall of Baghdad, turned out to be something of a farce. Mr Chalabi presented his own version of a new Iraqi flag, in blue, white and yellow, but refused to say what the design or the colours stood for. As he was declaring he had broad based popular support, a lone supporter outside, a kinsman from Nassiriyah, was shot by a passing motorist who had taken umbrage at a photograph of Mr Chalabi being waved.

    Yesterday’s press conference, with a backdrop of the old traditional red, white and black Iraqi flag, was far better staged, with Mr Chalabi promising more jobs, better education, better defence, women’s rights, higher pensions and an equitable share of oil revenues for the people of Iraq. When Iraqi forces were trained, Mr Chalabi said he would drastically cut the number of US troops in Iraq and confine them to barracks outside the cities.

    The questions afterwards were from a series of seemingly sympathetic Iraqi ‘journalists’. As soon as the first Western reporter, an American, raised his voice, Mr Chalabi declared the press conference was over.

    So there was no chance for questions about WMDs, the alleged Iranian links or alleged fraud. The issue of chemical and biological weapons was later addressed by Faisal Qaragholi, a Monarchist ally of Mr Chalabi whose group had also provided information on the subject to the US and British governments.

    “We never told the Americans to concentrate just on the WMDs; we asked them to look at the issue of human rights abuse. That would have given them a much better reason for interfering in Iraq”, said Mr Qaragholi.

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