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03/06/2016 Smelting Speaks: Maliki Decided To Retire From Public Office Once And For All
BAGHDAD - Iraq Press - March 7 / March: uncovered close to the head of a coalition of state law, Nuri al-Maliki on Monday sources, the latter decided to retire from formal political positions permanently.
Tlar: Maliki is already on the outside. He has held no position in the government since he was relieved of being the vice president. His formal announcement of retiring from political positions is a farce akin to your boss saying "resign or be fired".
Schízz: This popped up on facebook...please let it be so!!
03/06/2016 Smelting Speaks: Maliki Decided To Retire From Public Office Once And For All
BAGHDAD - Iraq Press - March 7 / March: uncovered close to the head of a coalition of state law, Nuri al-Maliki on Monday sources, the latter decided to retire from formal political positions permanently.
Tlar: Maliki is already on the outside. He has held no position in the government since he was relieved of being the vice president. His formal announcement of retiring from political positions is a farce akin to your boss saying "resign or be fired".
Tlar: In this case he was already fired and unless asked to return under extraordinary circumstances he will not hold a position in the future government of Iraq. Add to that Abadi has removed his tentacles (ministers) in this new government further isolating him.
Abadi has even resigned from the SOL which means he makes none of their meetings and therefore Abadi has impaired the lines of direct communication with the SOL. Maliki is bitching and moaning but it is mostly now falling on deaf ears other than those other corrupt cohorts in the SOL.
The parties stature has been diminished greatly and IMO this is a party that eventually will have such a bad connotation that it will not exist in the future. Iran backed the wrong horse in the election so their influence has also been damaged.
If it turns out that Iran did plan and attempted to execute that plan to assassinate Sadr, IMO Iran will have damaged their influence to the point that this government will turn their back completely on them. Iran's days of meddling are numbered.
As the article implies Maliki is at odds with and afraid of Sadr. Sadr can be a loose cannon. If Sadr believes Iran has plotted to assassinate him, I feel comfortable that he will see Maliki as having some kind of involvement.
Even though the Sadr brigades have been diminished greatly, I am quite sure that they still have the muscle left to attempt their own assassination aimed at Malikii.
Although never tried or arrested for the murder of an opposing cleric, the Iraqi street rumors are that Sadr himself walked into the mosque and shot the cleric. So IMO Sadr is not one you want to screw with.
Maliki put a death sentence on Sadr in 2009 and Sadr had to exile himself to Iran for years to escape Maliki carrying out that sentence. Iran in 2010 brokered the deal whereby the charges and death sentence was dropped in return for Sadr throwing his parties votes behind Maliki's PM run.
Sadr ended up doing the deal but regretted it from day one. This move was instrumental in getting Maliki the PM ship in 2010. Again in 2014 Iran attempted to broker another deal to get Sadr to once again back Maliki bid for a third term. Sadr said no.
This put Sadr at odds with Iran. Sadr's break from Iran was instrumental because he threw his votes in the NA with the Majority that turned the tide of the election to Abadi and against Maliki.
Iran has never forgoten that Sadr thumbed his nose at them which ultimately brought the new government in and started the decline of Iran's influence in Iraq. Under Maliki, Iran had complete control. We have already seen that under Abadi they have almost no control.
Abadi even told the head of the quds to leave the country when he came in with a message from Iran to tell Abadi that Maliki should be treated as a hero, not a criminal by this government.
Abadi is closer to the west than he is to Iran. We have seen proof of this when he turned the Security file over to the US, not Iran, and organizing the techno government over to the British.
Daily he is dismantling Iran's influence from the "popular crowd" not being involved in the battle of Mosel, to removing anyone with dual citizenship in parliament......
If he is allowed to continue on his quest, he will end up removing all the tenticles that will allow Iraq for the first time since 2003 to prosper without heavy foreign influence from its neighbor. A functioning democracy (parliamentary system) in the ME. All in my opinion of course. tlar
Abadi has even resigned from the SOL which means he makes none of their meetings and therefore Abadi has impaired the lines of direct communication with the SOL. Maliki is bitching and moaning but it is mostly now falling on deaf ears other than those other corrupt cohorts in the SOL.
The parties stature has been diminished greatly and IMO this is a party that eventually will have such a bad connotation that it will not exist in the future. Iran backed the wrong horse in the election so their influence has also been damaged.
If it turns out that Iran did plan and attempted to execute that plan to assassinate Sadr, IMO Iran will have damaged their influence to the point that this government will turn their back completely on them. Iran's days of meddling are numbered.
As the article implies Maliki is at odds with and afraid of Sadr. Sadr can be a loose cannon. If Sadr believes Iran has plotted to assassinate him, I feel comfortable that he will see Maliki as having some kind of involvement.
Even though the Sadr brigades have been diminished greatly, I am quite sure that they still have the muscle left to attempt their own assassination aimed at Malikii.
Although never tried or arrested for the murder of an opposing cleric, the Iraqi street rumors are that Sadr himself walked into the mosque and shot the cleric. So IMO Sadr is not one you want to screw with.
Maliki put a death sentence on Sadr in 2009 and Sadr had to exile himself to Iran for years to escape Maliki carrying out that sentence. Iran in 2010 brokered the deal whereby the charges and death sentence was dropped in return for Sadr throwing his parties votes behind Maliki's PM run.
Sadr ended up doing the deal but regretted it from day one. This move was instrumental in getting Maliki the PM ship in 2010. Again in 2014 Iran attempted to broker another deal to get Sadr to once again back Maliki bid for a third term. Sadr said no.
This put Sadr at odds with Iran. Sadr's break from Iran was instrumental because he threw his votes in the NA with the Majority that turned the tide of the election to Abadi and against Maliki.
Iran has never forgoten that Sadr thumbed his nose at them which ultimately brought the new government in and started the decline of Iran's influence in Iraq. Under Maliki, Iran had complete control. We have already seen that under Abadi they have almost no control.
Abadi even told the head of the quds to leave the country when he came in with a message from Iran to tell Abadi that Maliki should be treated as a hero, not a criminal by this government.
Abadi is closer to the west than he is to Iran. We have seen proof of this when he turned the Security file over to the US, not Iran, and organizing the techno government over to the British.
Daily he is dismantling Iran's influence from the "popular crowd" not being involved in the battle of Mosel, to removing anyone with dual citizenship in parliament......
If he is allowed to continue on his quest, he will end up removing all the tenticles that will allow Iraq for the first time since 2003 to prosper without heavy foreign influence from its neighbor. A functioning democracy (parliamentary system) in the ME. All in my opinion of course. tlar
Schízz: This popped up on facebook...please let it be so!!
03/06/2016 Smelting Speaks: Maliki Decided To Retire From Public Office Once And For All
BAGHDAD - Iraq Press - March 7 / March: uncovered close to the head of a coalition of state law, Nuri al-Maliki on Monday sources, the latter decided to retire from formal political positions permanently.
03/06/2016 Smelting Speaks: Maliki Decided To Retire From Public Office Once And For All
BAGHDAD - Iraq Press - March 7 / March: uncovered close to the head of a coalition of state law, Nuri al-Maliki on Monday sources, the latter decided to retire from formal political positions permanently.
New World newspaper quoted sources described Palmqrbh of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki earlier that he decided to "retire" from official positions once and for all.
The sources added that "al-Maliki told the Iraqi politicians, and non-Iraqi retiring positions decision", without disclosing the occasion of adoption of this resolution, or the reasons that prompted Maliki to him.
And circulated among the press a letter attributed to the melting-Maliki, "Yasser al-Maliki" the means of social communication "Watts August" in which he stressed that "Nuri al-Maliki decided to retire from the official political life once and for all, and he had told Iraqi officials and non-Iraqis do."
The National Alliance, which held the leaders meeting Sunday in Karbala, has seen the participation of the leaders of the first line (Haider al-Abadi, Ammar al-Hakim and Muqtada al-Sadr and Ibrahim al-Jaafari), while absent from the meeting, head of a coalition of state law, Nuri al-Maliki, raising questions observers.
It is said that al-Maliki, the Iraqi government terrace for two elections for the years (2006 - 2010) and (2010 to 2014). Q ended (1)
http://ift.tt/1QAKQMX
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.
The sources added that "al-Maliki told the Iraqi politicians, and non-Iraqi retiring positions decision", without disclosing the occasion of adoption of this resolution, or the reasons that prompted Maliki to him.
And circulated among the press a letter attributed to the melting-Maliki, "Yasser al-Maliki" the means of social communication "Watts August" in which he stressed that "Nuri al-Maliki decided to retire from the official political life once and for all, and he had told Iraqi officials and non-Iraqis do."
The National Alliance, which held the leaders meeting Sunday in Karbala, has seen the participation of the leaders of the first line (Haider al-Abadi, Ammar al-Hakim and Muqtada al-Sadr and Ibrahim al-Jaafari), while absent from the meeting, head of a coalition of state law, Nuri al-Maliki, raising questions observers.
It is said that al-Maliki, the Iraqi government terrace for two elections for the years (2006 - 2010) and (2010 to 2014). Q ended (1)
http://ift.tt/1QAKQMX
http://ift.tt/1W3FdHo
.
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