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Viewing cable 10BAGHDAD537, COALITION PROFILE: THE IRAQI NATIONAL ALLIANCE

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10BAGHDAD537 2010-02-28 16:44 2011-08-30 01:44 SECRET Embassy Baghdad
VZCZCXYZ0002
OO RUEHWEB

DE RUEHGB #0537/01 0591644
ZNY SSSSS ZZH
O 281644Z FEB 10
FM AMEMBASSY BAGHDAD
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 6892
INFO RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC IMMEDIATE
RUCNRAQ/IRAQ COLLECTIVE
S E C R E T BAGHDAD 000537 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/28/2020 
TAGS: PGOV KDEM IZ
SUBJECT: COALITION PROFILE: THE IRAQI NATIONAL ALLIANCE 
 
REF: A. 09 BAGHDAD 0036 
     B. 09 BAGHDAD 2386 
     C. 09 BAGHDAD 3175 
     D. 09 BAGHDAD 3176 
     E. 09 BAGHDAD 2910 
     F. 10 BAGHDAD 0304 
     G. 09 BAGHDAD 2879 
     H. 09 BAGHDAD 2704 
     I. 10 BAGHDAD 0121 
     J. 10 BAGHDAD 0436 
     K. 10 BAGHDAD 0520 
 
Classified By: Acting Political Minister-Counselor Yuri Kim for Reasons 
 1.4 (b, d) 
 
1. (C) Summary: The Iraqi National Alliance (INA) was 
officially formed on August 24, 2009 and is often seen as the 
successor of the pan-Shi'a United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), which 
captured a plurality of votes in the 2005 national elections. 
 Comprised of 32 entities, including a small number of token 
Sunni figures, the INA stands as the strongest competition to 
PM Maliki's State of Law Alliance (SLA) for the Iraqi Shi'a 
vote.  The INA candidate list contains prominent names from 
across the Iraqi Shi'a political arena, including several 
prospective candidates for Iraq's next Prime Minister. 
Current tensions between the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq 
(ISCI) and the Sadrist Trend -- the two biggest components of 
the INA -- will likely increase, leading to the coalition's 
probable breakup after the elections.  The INA enjoys strong 
name recognition and party loyalty, but its electoral 
prospects will be limited by its sectarian image and its 
close ties to Iran.  Based on available information, we 
believe the INA may win roughly the same share of 
parliamentary seats as the SLA.  Elements of both coalitions 
will likely ally after the elections to ensure Shi'a primacy 
in the next government.  End Summary. 
 
INA Component Parties 
--------------------- 
 
2. (C) Those parties that factor most prominently in the INA 
include ISCI, Badr Organization, the Sadrist Trend, the 
National Reform Trend, the Iraqi National Congress (INC), 
Fadhila, and the Solidarity Bloc.  Also included on the INA 
ballot is fugitive parliamentarian and Kata'ib Hizballah 
leader Jamal Ja'afar Ali al-Ibrahimi (aka Abu Mahdi 
al-Muhandis), one of the IRGC's main Iraqi proxies.  The 
leading figure of each of these parties is listed below: 
 
-- ISCI: Chairman Ammar al-Hakim 
-- Badr Organization: Secretary General Hadi al-Amiri 
-- Sadrist Trend: Muqtada al-Sadr (residing in Iran) 
-- National Reform Trend: Ibrahim al-Ja'afari 
-- Iraqi National Congress: Ahmed Chalabi 
-- Solidarity Bloc: Qassim Daoud 
-- Fadhila: Hassan al-Shimmari 
 
INA Leadership Profiles 
----------------------- 
 
3. (S) ISCI and the Sadrist Trend, led by Ammar al-Hakim and 
Muqtada al-Sadr respectively, are the two most prominent 
blocs within the INA.  Though the INA has no clear political 
figure head, Hakim's extensive efforts to burnish his 
leadership credentials as the new head of ISCI, coupled with 
Sadrist opposition to engagement with U.S. officials and 
Sadr's current residence in Iran, have allowed Hakim to 
emerge as a leading voice within the INA.  (Note: ISCI and 
the Badr Organization are closely linked and often times 
ISCI/Badr leaders speak with one voice; statements made by 
Hakim on behalf of ISCI are often informed and supported by 
Badr Secretary General Hadi al-Amiri.  End Note.) 
 
--Ammar al-Hakim: Hakim was formally selected in September 
2009 to succeed his late father, Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, as 
ISCI Chairman and has since been working to consolidate his 
leadership as he counters questions about his relative youth 
and inexperience.  Reflecting the views of several other 
senior contacts, Ayad Allawi told A/DCM on February 2 that in 
his assessment, Hakim is still trying to hold his own against 
old guard heavyweights in ISCI, to include Humam al-Hammudi 
Qold guard heavyweights in ISCI, to include Humam al-Hammudi 
and VP Adil Abd al-Mahdi.  Hakim is a well-educated and 
articulate interlocutor, with a quick sense of humor.  In 
meetings he welcomes input from ISCI/Badr advisors and 
colleagues, despite at times acknowledging that their 
opinions differ.  Over the fall of 2009, we noted a marked 
shift in ISCI messages, reflecting a more moderate tone in an 
effort to de-emphasize sectarian themes, accompanied by an 
increase in regional engagement.  (Note: Hakim conducted a 
tour of capitals in nearby Arab states after becoming ISCI 
Chairman.  End Note.)  Hakim has drawn a distinction, for 
example, between rank and file former Ba'ath Party members 
who joined for pragmatic career reasons, versus "Saddamist 
Ba'athists" who committed crimes against the Iraqi people. 
This course correction is likely part of an effort to 
increase ISCI's appeal to prospective voters. 
 
--Muqtada al-Sadr: Sadr emerged as the leader of the Sadrist 
Trend following the death of his father and two older 
brothers in 1999 and the subsequent U.S. invasion of Iraq. 
He has resided in Iran since 2007, where he is said to be 
working on his religious studies, with the reported intention 
of acquiring the status of Ayatollah.  Sadr is frequently 
rumored to be returning to Iraq; past reports of his imminent 
return have not come to pass.  Sadr is often referred to as 
paranoid and distrustful, even of those in his inner circle, 
and has a known tendency to replace those he thinks have 
become too powerful and thereby pose a threat to his 
authority.  Like Hakim, Sadr maintains close financial and 
political ties to Iran. 
 
Key INA Political Figures 
------------------------- 
 
4. (S) The following are key political figures within the 
INA, including several prospective candidates for the post of 
prime minister in the next government. 
 
--Vice President Adil Abd al-Mahdi (1st on INA list in Dhi 
Qar): Iraq's Shi'a VP is both a candidate in the upcoming 
national election and one of the most oft-mentioned 
frontrunners to be Iraq's next PM.  Abd al-Mahdi, in 
conjunction with Hakim, has worked to push ISCI to the 
forefront in promoting relations with neighboring Arab 
states, while still stressing the importance of Iraq 
maintaining strong relations with both Washington and Tehran. 
 (Note: Despite ISCI's overtures, some Sunni Arab states, 
most notably Saudi Arabia, would likely remain suspicious of 
an INA-led government.  End Note.)  Western educated and with 
a PhD in economics, Abd al-Mahdi is one of the only PM 
candidates who boasts a clear economic vision for Iraq (ref 
A).  Abd al-Mahdi and Iraqiyya leader Ayad Allawi are 
reportedly KRG President Barzani's preferred candidates to 
succeed Maliki, while an ISCI spokesperson on January 11 
announced the party's backing of both Abd al-Mahdi and 
Minister of Finance Baqir Jabur al-Zubaidi (AKA Bayan Jabr) 
as the next prime minister.  (Note: Abd al-Mahdi was a 
leading candidate for Prime Minister in 2006, and remains 
keenly aware of the perceived U.S. role in opposing his 
premiership. End Note.) 
 
--Sheikh Humam al-Hammudi (1st on INA list in Sulaymaniyah): 
Hammudi is a Shi'a cleric and ISCI COR bloc leader; he is 
currently the Chair of both the Council of Representatives 
(COR) Constitutional Review Committee (CRC) and Foreign 
Relations Committee.  As a drafter of the Iraqi Constitution 
and CRC Chair, Hammudi worked unsuccessfully to push through 
a constitutional amendments package in early 2010, which, 
among other things, would have reigned in some of the PM's 
powers.  Hammudi was -- and likely remains -- critical in 
private of Ammar al-Hakim succeeding his father as the head 
of ISCI, but has refrained from openly criticizing Hakim's 
leadership.  Hammudi is sympathetic to the Iranian government 
(ref B) and bristles at what he perceives to be U.S. 
intervention in Iraqi politics (see para 7 below). 
 
--MP Hadi al-Amiri (1st on INA list in Diyala): Amiri is the 
Secretary General of the Badr Organization and Chair of the 
COR Security and Defense Committee.  Amiri is a leading force 
within ISCI/Badr and was a close confidant of the late Abd 
al-Aziz al-Hakim.  In November-December 2009, Amiri surprised 
many political observers when he emerged as a voice of 
cross-sectarianism and played a lead mediating role during 
Qcross-sectarianism and played a lead mediating role during 
election law negotiations.  Amiri reached out in particular 
to Sunni and Kurdish leaders to propose an election law 
compromise which protected Sunni interests and was ultimately 
accepted by all sides (refs C, D).  (Comment: Amiri's new 
mantle was rather ironic given his direct involvement in 
interrogating and torturing Sunni Iraqis during the height of 
sectarian violence; he may still have a difficult time 
shaking off his past record during post-election government 
formation negotiations.  End Comment.) 
 
--Ibrahim al-Ja'fari (1st on INA list in Baghdad): Former 
Iraqi Prime Minister Ja'fari (2005-2006) formed the National 
Reform Trend in 2008 and is currently looking to regain a key 
role in the Iraqi leadership.  Ja'fari as well as National 
Reform Trend Bloc leader Falih al-Fayyadh as of late have 
been reluctant to meet with U.S. officials, likely due in 
part to their intra-coalition alliance with the Sadrist 
Trend.  According to UNAMI contacts as well as DPM Rowsch 
Shaways, Ja'fari is the Sadrist Trend's preferred PM 
candidate. 
--Ahmed Chalabi (3rd on INA list in Baghdad): Chalabi has 
earned criticism -- but also popularity and fear -- for his 
role as a central figure in the de-Ba'athification purge of 
mostly secular election candidates.  MP and SLA candidate 
Izzat Shabandar, a member of the COR Accountability and 
Justice Committee, told Poloffs that Chalabi was able to 
manipulate the de-Ba'ath situation so as to force PM Maliki 
and other senior Shi'a leaders to accept his will, or face 
the wrath of an emotional Shi'a body politic.  Chalabi is 
often criticized for his ties to Iran; Allawi, for example, 
told Ambassador Hill on February 13 that he saw Chalabi as 
"married" to Iran, and asserted that Chalabi has historically 
misinformed U.S. policymakers in a manner that played into 
Iran's hand.  Chalabi has openly acknowledged his relations 
with senior Iranian officials in meetings with Emboffs (ref 
E). 
 
--Qassim Daoud (7th on INA list in Najaf): Daoud is the head 
of the Solidarity Bloc, a grouping of independent Shi'a MPs 
and a former Minister of State for National Security under 
Iraq's interim government.  He was rumored as a possible PM 
candidate in 2006, but his lack of a strong popular support 
base - which continues to this day - worked against his 
chances.  He has been actively campaigning in Najaf over the 
last month.  Daoud has been a key interlocutor for U.S. 
officials since 2003, has close ties to Sistani (despite 
being quite Westernized), and in early February 2010 was 
selected by the INA coalition's Executive Committee to 
formally relay INA concerns to the Embassy on the perceived 
change of U.S. policy toward the Ba'ath Party (ref F). 
 
-- Sadrists: Although the Sadrist Trend holds 30 seats in the 
current COR, the largest share of any Shi'a party, no strong 
leading political figure has emerged among Sadrist 
politicians.  Sadrist officials withdrew from Iraqi Ministry 
positions in April 2007 in protest of the U.S. occupation. 
However, Sadr appears to now recognize the importance of 
working through the political establishment, and on October 
16 the Sadrist Trend held Iraq's first primary election, in a 
public show of commitment to the open-list system (ref G). 
Sadrist officials remain unwilling to engage with U.S. 
diplomats, but PRToffs have noted low-level engagement with 
local Sadrist officials who participate in PRT-sponsored 
training and seminars. 
 
Political Platform: A Unified, Sovereign Iraq 
--------------------------------------------- 
 
5. (C) The INA's campaign platform, as presented by Ammar 
al-Hakim, is based on the principles of a unified, sovereign 
Iraq that draws authority from the constitution, and is run 
by a strong federal government in conjunction with empowered 
local administrations and governments.  Security and regional 
engagement are also key elements of the INA platform. 
Chalabi in late October told Emboffs that the INA would 
campaign on a platform of anti-corruption and providing 
services to contrast itself with the current government's 
failures; however, such themes now appear to have taken a 
back seat (ref H), particularly as de-Ba'athification has 
emerged as a prominent issue in the Shi'a-dominated southern 
provinces. 
 
6. (C) While all INA candidates are theoretically running on 
a broad coalition-approved platform, individual candidates 
and component parties have broad leeway to tailor their 
campaign messages to appeal to local constituencies.  For 
example, Fadhila MP Karim al-Yaqubi told Poloffs in 
mid-February that his campaign slogan is "Water is Life," a 
theme he believed would resonate with the many Iraqis 
Qtheme he believed would resonate with the many Iraqis 
connected to the agricultural sector.  He said that his 
personal platform is based on a push for a federal Iraq, as 
he believes provincial officials, versus the central 
government in Baghdad, know best what is in the interest of 
their constituents.  Office of the Martyr Sadr Political 
Committee head Karrar al-Khafaji has said publicly that the 
issues of detainee releases and prison conditions are key 
Sadrist political priorities.  Additionally, according to 
Sadrist media outlets, Sadr has mandated that Trend 
candidates emphasize the importance of an independent Iraq 
free of U.S. influence, as well as the plight of the 
oppressed and needy. 
 
7. (C) It appears that some INA candidates are attempting to 
appeal to Shi'a constituents through criticism of perceived 
U.S. interference in Iraq's internal affairs.  Several key 
figures in the INA outside the Sadrist Trend, for example, 
have publicly accused the United States of having pressured 
the Cassation Chamber to issue a decision on February 3 
(subsequently reversed) to delay review of de-Ba'athification 
appeals by disqualified candidates until after the Iraqi 
election (ref I).  (Comment: Embassy and PRT officials have 
worked at both the national and provincial level to dispel 
such accusations and have stressed that the United States has 
only advocated for transparency and due process in the 
de-Ba'athification process. End Comment.)  This criticism of 
the United States as a campaign theme may be connected to a 
change of tone in ISCI's dialogue with the Embassy.  While 
the late Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim recognized the positive role 
that the United States could and should play in post-Saddam 
Iraq, his son Ammar and other senior ISCI leaders have 
recently made clear, albeit politely, that they expect the 
United States to shift from its current role as a principal 
into a supporting role when the next government comes to 
power.  During a February 17 meeting with the DCM, Ammar 
indicated that an ISCI-led government would move away from 
the current close level of security cooperation with the 
United States and insist on a lower profile for remaining 
U.S. forces (ref J).  Humam Hammudi told PolCouns on February 
24 that, since Iraq has assumed full sovereignty, the United 
States would not have a seat at the table for government 
formation after the March 7 elections (ref K). 
 
Strengths 
--------- 
 
8. (C) Regional Engagement:  Whereas PM Maliki has been 
criticized for his poor relations with neighboring Arab 
states, while Allawi has been castigated for neglecting 
domestic voters in favor of engaging regional leaders, INA 
arguably provides a well-regarded balance between these two 
extremes.  Between mid-November and mid-December, Hakim 
conducted a regional outreach tour, meeting with senior 
leadership in Turkey, Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar, Kuwait, and 
Syria, and stressed the need to develop and strengthen Iraq's 
relations with its Arab neighbors.  Hakim has been 
unsuccessful, however, in securing an invitation to visit 
Riyadh. 
 
9. (C) Name Recognition and Party Loyalty:  The INA candidate 
roster contains some of the most well-known Shi'a political 
figures in Iraq, as well as the added name recognition of two 
of the most prominent Shi'a clerical families, Hakim and 
Sadr.  ISCI, through the Hakim family, is arguably the 
political entity with the closest ties to Najaf's influential 
Marja'iyah.  (Comment: Unlike the Sadrists, who have a 
significant following in the Shi'a southern provinces, ISCI 
does not espouse Iran's "velayat-e-faqih" (rule of the 
jurisprudent) system of clerical rule.  End Comment.) 
 
10. (C) Organizational Structure: Of all entities running in 
the upcoming election, the Sadrist Trend appears to have the 
best grassroots organizational structure, particularly in the 
south where voter mobilization and turnout will be key.  The 
Sadrist Trend historically has emphasized the importance of 
providing social welfare and assistance programs, and as such 
has established a loyal following and potentially wide voter 
base.  Additionally, many INA candidates, in contrast to the 
more aloof Iraqiyya coalition candidates, have spent the past 
month in the provinces in which they are running in an 
attempt to gain name recognition and demonstrate their local 
roots so as to win the votes of residents. 
 
Weaknesses 
---------- 
 
11. (C) Sectarian Image:  In an Iraqi body politic that is 
attempting, albeit haltingly, to move toward a nationalist 
focus and away from the sectarian politics that shaped the 
2005 election, the INA is seen as strongly sectarian and more 
religious than Maliki's SLA.  Efforts by Hakim to market its 
moderate, non-sectarian attributes have done little to dispel 
this image.  Dominated by two of the most well-known Shi'a 
clerical families, the INA is unlikely to appeal to more 
Qclerical families, the INA is unlikely to appeal to more 
secular and nationalist voters; it will capture no meaningful 
share of the Sunni vote. 
 
12. (C) Ties To Iran: The INA is undeniably the coalition 
with the strongest ties to the Iranian regime.  Senior ISCI 
and Badr leaders stress to U.S. officials the importance of 
Iraq maintaining close ties to both Washington and Tehran, 
and even Western-leaning INA officials -- to include VP Abd 
al-Mahdi and Qassim Daoud -- regularly engage with Iranian 
leaders.  Abd al-Mahdi often makes the point that Iraq cannot 
afford to be on bad terms with its eastern neighbor; Abd 
al-Mahdi advisor Raja al-Khalili told Poloffs that the VP 
follows every trip to Washington with a layover in Tehran. 
INA officials who spent decades in exile in Iran are 
sensitive about being labeled Iranian lackeys given strong 
public mistrust, including in Iraq's Shi'a community, of 
Tehran's intentions toward Iraq.  (Comment: Shi'a tribal 
leaders are especially wary of Iran, and thus appear to 
generally favor the SLA or Allawi's Iraqiyya coalition over 
the INA.  End Comment.)  Accordingly, they struggle to 
publicly distance themselves from Tehran, while privately 
supporting Iran's objectives for an Islamist Shi'a-led 
government. 
 
13. (C) Internal Divisions: Long-standing tensions exist 
between ISCI and the Sadrist Trend, which have grown more 
pronounced as the elections near.  During a press conference 
in Lebanon in late January, ISCI Chairman Hakim inflamed 
tensions with Muqtada al-Sadr through a statement that "the 
resistance in Iraq is nothing but a group of murderers and it 
has no clear features or personalities."  Hakim later walked 
back his remarks to calm the situation, but implied to the 
DCM on February 17 that differences persist.  Sadrist COR 
member and chair of the COR Legal Committee Baja al-Araji in 
mid-February was quoted in press as saying his bloc may 
withdraw from the INA following the election if the coalition 
partners could not reach consensus on key issues. 
 
Projection of COR Seats 
----------------------- 
 
14. (C) According to available polling data, the INA ranks 
second to the SLA among Shi'a voters.  The difference between 
the two coalitions, however, is narrow given the margins of 
error.  We assess that the INA will likely capture close to 
the same number of seats as the SLA -- in the range of 
between 65 and 75 seats -- in the next COR. 
 
Post-election Government Formation 
---------------------------------- 
 
15. (C) ISCI leadership has repeatedly claimed that the INA 
is in the best position to form a government relatively 
quickly because of its good relations with other groups 
across the Iraqi political spectrum.  Hakim made this 
argument most recently in a February 17 meeting with the DCM 
and speculated that the SLA and Iraqiyya would have a much 
more difficult time forming a stable coalition government. 
Hakim's point is plausible given the strong opposition of 
many Iraqi political players to Maliki serving a second term 
as PM.  Nevertheless, we expect that at least some INA 
elements, but probably not the Sadrists, will ally with 
Maliki's Da'wa party (the main SLA component) after the 
elections to ensure Shi'a primacy in the next government. 
Whether they coalesce around Maliki, an ISCI leader, or an 
alternative figure as their consensus choice for PM depends 
on how well the parties do in the elections. 
HILL