A day before the deadline for the new constitution, Sunni Arabs appealed Sunday to the United States and United Nations to prevent Shiites and Kurds from pushing a draft through parliament without their consent, warning it would only worsen the crisis in Iraq.
AP reported leaders of the Sunni Arab, Shiite and Kurdish factions planned final talks on Monday morning according to officials of all three groups. "I am not optimistic," said Kamal Hamdoun, a negotiator for the influential Sunni minority. "We either reach unanimity or not."
The initial Aug. 15 deadline was pushed to Monday after no agreement was reached, and Iraqi officials have insisted they would meet the new deadline and present a final document to the National Assembly, dominated by Shiites and Kurds. But the chief government spokesman suggested another delay may be necessary.
Saddam Hussein, who faces trial soon on charges he massacred fellow Muslims, promised in a letter published Sunday to sacrifice himself for the cause of Palestine and Iraq, and he urged Arabs to follow his path.
The letter was delivered by the International Committee of the Red Cross to a friend of Saddam's now living in Jordan.
"My soul and my existence is to be sacrificed for our precious Palestine and our beloved, patient and suffering Iraq," said the letter, published in two Jordanian newspapers.
In violence Sunday, an American soldier was killed by a roadside bomb near the northern city of Tikrit, the US military said. At least 1,866 members of the US military have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
A Sunni Arab backlash could complicate the US strategy of using the political process to lure members of the minority away from the Sunni-dominated insurgency. Washington hopes that a constitution, followed by general elections in December, will enable the United States and its international partners to begin removing troops next year.
Issues holding up agreement on the draft include federalism, distribution of Iraq's oil wealth, power sharing questions among the provinces and the role of the Shiite clerical hierarchy.
Vice President Adil Abdul-Mahdi, a Shiite, said 97 percent of the draft had been finished and predicted the document would be forwarded to parliament on time Monday.
Government spokesman Laith Kubba said there were two options if political leaders fail to complete the draft: amend the interim constitution again and extend the deadline, or dissolve parliament.
But the Sunni Arabs complained that they have been invited to only one session with the other groups since the extension was granted.
As of late Sunday, Sunni Arab negotiators said they were sticking by their opposition to federalism and other demands.
"At a time when there are few hours left to announce the draft, we still see no active coordination and seriousness to draft the constitution," the Sunni Arab negotiators said in a statement.
They urged the United States, the United Nations and the international community to intervene to prevent a draft that lacks unanimous agreement among all three factions, saying it "would make the current crisis more complicated."
Sen. George Allen (news, bio, voting record), R-Va., said a constitution guaranteeing basic freedoms would provide a rallying point for Iraqis.
"I think this is a very crucial time for the future of Iraq," Allen said on "This Week" on ABC. "The terrorists don't have anything to win the hearts and minds of the people of Iraq. All they care to do is disrupt."
Shiites and Kurds have enough seats in parliament to win approval for a draft without the Sunni Arabs.
However, the minority could scuttle the constitution when voters decide whether to ratify it in the Oct. 15 referendum. Under current rules, the constitution would be defeated if it is opposed by two-thirds of the voters in three of Iraq's 18 provinces. Sunni Arabs form the majority in at least four.
Some radical groups within the insurgency, notably al-Qaida's wing led by the Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, oppose any constitution as an affront to Islam and have vowed to kill anyone who votes in the referendum. Sunni clerics, however, have urged their followers to register to vote.
Also Sunday, the Iraqi government said neighboring Jordan has allowed Saddam's family to fund a network seeking to destabilize Iraq and re-establish the banned Baath Party.
Kubba, speaking to reporters in Baghdad, cited Saddam's relatives who live in Jordan, where they have "huge amounts of money" to "support ... efforts to revive Baath Party organizations." Kubba did not specify individual family members, but Saddam's two oldest daughters live in the Jordanian capital, Amman.
Although the Iraqis frequently have complained of subversive activity generated from Syria, Kubba's remarks were the strongest yet directed against pro-Western Jordan. Tens of thousands of Iraqis have moved to Amman to escape the violence in Iraq.
During an interview later Sunday on CNN's "Late Edition," Kubba said Iraq wanted good relations with Jordan.
But he said there were former members of Saddam's regime using Jordan as a base.
"And they have launched a campaign, they are calling back members of the Baath Party to organize meetings and to develop a strategy, and influencing events in Iraq," he added.
Kubba's statements were apparently aimed in part at deflecting criticism from Amman about the possible involvement of Iraqis in subversive operations in Jordan.
Jordanian police have detained an undetermined number of Iraqis and other foreign Arab suspects in the Friday rocket attack that barely missed a US warship docked in Aqaba.
"We don't want Jordan to harm a quarter of a million Iraqis (living in Jordan) because of one Iraqi" involved in Friday's attack, which killed a Jordanian soldier, Kubba said.
The Jordanian government had no immediate comment.
(Chinadaily.com via agencies August 22, 2005)
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