Allawi hires Republican lobbyist powerhouse

There are have been a variety of indications that former interim Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi is making a power play, in the hopes of replacing Maliki. Some of Allawi’s strategy has been behind the scenes, while some of it is more overt.

A powerhouse Republican lobbying firm with close ties to the White House has begun a public campaign to undermine the government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, CNN has confirmed.

This comes as President Bush is publicly taking great pains to reiterate his support for the embattled Iraqi leader, whose government has come under sharp criticism and scrutiny from Washington lawmakers and officials and Thursday’s National Intelligence Estimate.

A senior Bush administration official told CNN the White House is aware of the lobbying campaign by Barbour Griffith & Rogers because the firm is “blasting e-mails all over town” criticizing al-Maliki and promoting the firm’s client, former interim Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, as an alternative to the current Iraqi leader.

Allawi had an op-ed in the WaPo the other day, which clearly indicated he was making some political strides in hopes of currying favor in DC, but hiring Barbour Griffith & Rogers suggests the Republican establishment may be ready to bet on a different horse.

The firm, a Republican mainstay created by Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour (R), is already hard at work.

On August 17, the firm purchased the domain name Allawi-For-Iraq.com (the site’s not yet live). Following publication of the op-ed, Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI) called on the Iraqi parliament to hold a no-confidence vote on Maliki. BGR circulated Levin’s comments around Washington — and particularly to Congressional staffers — using the e-mail address DrAyadAllawi@Allawi-for-Iraq.com.

So, while Bush is publicly reaffirming his support for Maliki, some of the top Republican lobbyists in DC are organizing a campaign to replace him? Yep, that’s exactly what’s happening.

ThinkProgress makes clear why the GOP establishment may prefer Allawi to Maliki.

The right-wing has long had a fascination with Allawi, largely because he has proved to be compliant with the Bush administration’s agenda. Allawi was ceremonially anointed Iraq’s leader in June 2004 by then-Coalition Provisional Authority chief administrator Paul Bremer.

While serving as interim Prime Minister, Allawi repeatedly rejected calls for U.S. troop withdrawals. During the height of the 2004 presidential election campaign, Allawi delivered a strong defense of Bush’s “stay the course” strategy in much-hyped Rose Garden appearance. Later, media reports revealed that Allawi had been “coached” by the administration prior to his appearance: […]

Allawi has been described as “Saddam lite.” In 2004, he handcuffed and blindfolded suspected terrorists and shot them in the head with a pistol. Now, with frustrations mounting against current prime minister Maliki, the administration may be using that as an opportunity to usher in its reliable ally Allawi.

And with the administration’s new-found interest in giving up on Iraqi democracy anyway, “Saddam lite” might fit the bill.

Stay tuned.

It will not make a dinar’s worth of difference. The “insurgents” will just as enthusiastically try to kill Mr. Allawi as they do Mr. al-Maliki, and you can’t ram through an oil law when you can’t assemble a government. Allawi will be (correctly) perceived as a Bush-supported outsider with no real Iraqi interests beyond how much money Iraq can put in his pockets. However, what Allawi COULD do for Bush is buy him time. Bush could say, “It’s a new dawn in Iraq, blah, blah, blah (insert freedom-on-the-march bullshit here), and Dr. Allawi needs time to consolidate his new government”. All Bush cares about is getting to the finish line without having to withdraw or give any sign of losing.

  • We went to Iraq to get rid of Saddam—so we could install—Saddam Lite? Sounds like the administration wants to put in a bench-warmer that can “justify” a permanent basing in Iraq. Then if saddam Lite doesn’t work out, we can do one of those sequel-thingies:

    SHOCK-N-AWE-2….

  • Only Republicans would say this nation should spread democracy throughout the Middle East and then work undermine those efforts with their own lobbyists. That’s just precious.

    “Allawi has been described as ‘Saddam lite.’ In 2004, he handcuffed and blindfolded suspected terrorists and shot them in the head with a pistol.” Did anyone else immediately think of that quote about Cheney having a litle girl crush on strongmen? Shooting somebody in the head? That’s Cheney’s kind of guy right there!

  • The history of Vietnam continues to repeat itself in Iraq. The South Vietnamese strong-man Ngo Dinh Diem was overthrown and assassinated in a CIA-backed coup on November 1, 1963, and replaced with Nguyen Van Thieu and Nguyen Cao Ky, who were thought to be more reliable and compliant. If Bush had been sober and off drugs occasionally during the Vietnam era, he might have a first-hand memory of some of this.

    In spite of Bush’s statement yesterday of something-like-support for Malaki (Heck of a job, Malaki), it looks like we are seeing the early signs of a U.S. initiated “regime change” in Baghdad. Is anyone surprised?

  • Gee and I thought Iraq was a sovereign nation and all. Guess not.

    BushBrat must sit down every day and think of ways to make refuck the clusterfuck he made of Iraq. “Say Dick, you know how the Democrat Party got all mad when we fired those USAs? Watch this! Heh.”

    Aside from the fact that the Iraqis will flip their fucking lids when this news hits, can you imagine how this will play out on the international stage?

    Christ, if America’s image were traded on the stock market its numbers would make Enron’s look healthy.

  • This seems to have the potential to produce violence that threatens the peace or stability of Iraq and the government of Iraq, which would be subject to Bush’s executive order “Blocking Property of Certain Persons Who Threaten Stabilization Efforts in Iraq.”

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