Associated Press
January 31, 2003, Friday
HEADLINE:
Iraqi opposition leader back in his homeland to fight Saddam
Hussein
BYLINE: By BORZOU DARAGAHI, Associated Press Writer
DATELINE: SALAHUDDIN, Iraq
BODY:
Returning to his homeland for the first time in nearly five
years, a prominent Iraqi opposition leader entered the Kurds'
autonomous enclave with the help of Iran and declared Friday
he would stay there to battle Saddam Hussein's government.
"If we want to fight Saddam, we'll fight Saddam in Iraq
," Ahmed Chalabi, leader of the Iraqi National Congress,
said in an interview with The Associated Press.
Chalabi said he returned to Iraq "to be on the stage"
in the formation of a post-Saddam administration. He promised
to work with Kurdish opposition groups to form a provisional
government to rule once Saddam is gone.
Chalabi, who enjoys support within the U.S. Congress but is
a controversial figure within the fragmented opposition, entered
Iraq with four colleagues on Thursday. They crossed the Iranian
border at Hajj Omran after spending a week in Tehran meeting
with Iranian political leaders and Iraqi opposition figures.
The five are part of a 65-member steering committee, set up
during a conference in London last month. The committee is
to meet in mid-February in this enclave, which is protected
by U.S. and British planes patrolling the northern "no-fly"
zone.
The committee hopes to form the basis of a transitional government
if the United States - which threatens to attack Iraq if Saddam
does not give up alleged banned weapons - topples the Iraqi
regime. The opposition members are to meet Feb. 15, according
to the Kurdistan Democratic Party, which controls the western
section of the autonomous region.
Chalabi's links to Iran , which the Bush administration has
designated as part of an "axis of evil" along with
Iraq and North Korea , may cause concern among his conservative
backers in Washington .
His Iraqi National Congress, based in London , has received
millions of dollars from the United States for such projects
as a satellite television channel tailored for Iraqi viewers.
The INC officials said they informed Zalmay Khalilzad, an
adviser to the Bush administration, that they were headed
to northern Iraq before they left London for Iran eight days
ago.
In the interview, however, Chalabi said the United States
should not dominate the composition of any future government
in Iraq .
"There must be no gap in the sovereignty of Iraqis over
Iraq ," he said. "People who have come to the idea
of removing Saddam recently must understand that this fight
has been going on for decades and has cost tens of thousands
of lives. It's a major mistake to think you can sidestep the
opposition."
Chalabi sidestepped questions about reports that the United
States did not entirely trust the exiled opposition groups.
"We're not an exile group because we're in Iraq now,"
he said. "It's difficult to call us exiles when we're
in our own country working for freedom."
U.S. relations with the INC have been complicated by what
State Department officials see as the group's financial mismanagement.
Chalabi was convicted of fraud in a banking scandal in Jordan
in 1989 and sentenced to 20 years in prison. He fled the country
before the trial began and has refused to return until the
government agrees to reverse the conviction.
Furthermore, Iraq 's opposition has long been split along
ethnic and political lines and its history has been marked
by infighting and betrayal. While Chalabi's congress is often
portrayed as closest to the United States , it has never been
fully accepted by U.S. administrations.
One INC official, speaking on condition of anonymity in London
, described relations with Washington , especially the State
Department, as "long, tangled and convoluted."
Chalabi, a Shiite Muslim from a wealthy family who fled Iraq
in 1958, formed the Iraqi National Congress in 1992. He is
an MIT graduate with a doctorate from the University of Chicago
who has been active in anti-Saddam efforts since the early
1970s.
The Iraqi National Congress tried to start a revolt against
Saddam from within the northern no-fly zone in the mid-1990s.
The group blamed their failure on the U.S. government, which
didn't provide support, believing they had no chance of succeeding.
The visit is Chalabi's first to Iraq since 1998, when he briefly
visited the Kurdish-controlled city of Sulaimaniyah to meet
with Jalal Talabani, the leader of the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan, which governs the eastern section of the Kurdish
autonomous zone.
More significantly, it marks the first time Chalabi has visited
the western part of Kurdistan, controlled by the Kurdistan
Democratic Party, since August 1996. In that year, the leader
of the KDP, Massoud Barzani, invited Saddam to help liberate
the city during a war with the rival Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.
About 130 fighters from the Iraqi National Congress were killed
in the fighting or executed thereafter.
Kanan Makiya, a Brandeis University professor and Iraqi opposition
member, said the Iraqi National Congress and the Kurdistan
Democratic Party have mended fences. "I believe a very
genuine reconciliation has taken place," he said.
"It's not a tactical maneuver. The single most important
thing is to bring the KDP back into the fold of Iraqi opposition
politics," Makiya added. "Without them, we can't
say we have a really representative government."