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<H1>Iraqi leader under fire from U.S., Shiite supporters</H1>
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<H4><SPAN>Story Highlights</SPAN></H4>
<DIV>• <B>NEW:</B> Supporters of anti-U.S. cleric stop
participation in Iraq government<BR>• White House memo
says U.S. must determine Iraqi leader's intentions<BR>•
Bush security adviser says more U.S. troops may be
needed<BR>• Bush meeting Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki on Thursday in Jordan<BR></DIV>
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<P>(CNN) -- Iraq's prime minister saw his support erode on two fronts
Wednesday as a White House memo questioned his leadership and a powerful
political bloc suspended participation in Iraq's government.</P>
<P>The classified memo by President Bush's national security adviser
Stephen Hadley questions whether Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki can end the
bloody sectarian violence in Iraq, and especially whether he can rein in
the Mehdi Army militia loyal to anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.</P>
<P>Hours after details of the Hadley memo first appeared in Wednesday's
New York Times, Cabinet ministers and members of the Iraqi parliament
loyal to al-Sadr underscored al-Maliki's shaky position, saying they would
stop participating in his government. (<A
href="javascript:cnnVideo('play','/video/politics/2006/11/29/malveaux.iraq.leaked.memo.cnn','2006/12/06');"
target=_blank>Watch how memo outlines possible courses for change</A>)</P>
<P>The al-Sadr supporters had said earlier they would take such action if
al-Maliki went ahead with a meeting with Bush on Thursday in Jordan.</P>
<P>There are about 30 lawmakers loyal to al-Sadr in the 275-member
parliament, and six Cabinet ministers from his bloc. (<A
href="javascript:cnnVideo('play','/video/politics/2006/11/29/malveaux.iraq.leaked.memo.cnn','2006/12/06');"
target=_blank>Watch how loss of support endangers al-Maliki</A>)</P>
<P>Bush and al-Maliki are expected to discuss political and security
strategies for Iraq during talks Wednesday and Thursday in Jordan.</P>
<P>The Hadley memo outlines steps the United States could take to
strengthen al-Maliki, including sending more U.S. troops to boost security
in Baghdad.</P>
<P>"We should waste no time in our efforts to determine [al-]Maliki's
intentions and, if necessary, to augment his capabilities," the memo said.
(<A
href="javascript:cnnVideo('play','/video/politics/2006/11/28/malveaux.bush.latvia.nato.cnn','2006/12/05');"
target=_blank>Watch how Bush is determined to win in Iraq</A><A
href="javascript:cnnVideo('play','javascript:cnnVideo('play','/video/politics/2006/11/28/malveaux.bush.latvia.nato.cnn','2006/12/05');','2006/11/29');"
target=_blank><IMG class=cnnVideoIcon height=12 alt=Video hspace=0
src="http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/.element/img/1.5/main/icon_video.gif" width=19
vspace=1 border=0></A>)</P>
<P>A senior administration official confirmed the memo's authenticity for
CNN, but said the leak of the memo was "not helpful."</P>
<P>"It's unfortunate that the White House's classified internal
deliberations were leaked to the press," the official said.</P>
<P>White House press secretary Tony Snow said Wednesday that Bush retains
confidence in al-Maliki, pointing out that the Iraqi leader has been "very
aggressive in recent weeks in taking on some of the key challenges."</P>
<P>The November 8 memo was written after Hadley returned from Iraq and
followed an October 30 meeting he had with al-Maliki, the Times
reported.</P>
<P>"[Al-]Maliki reiterated a vision of Shia, Sunni, and Kurdish
partnership, and in my one-on-one meeting with him, he impressed me as a
leader who wanted to be strong but was having difficulty figuring out how
to do so," Hadley said in the memo.</P>
<P>Sectarian violence has been raging since the February 22 bombing of a
Shiite shrine in Samarra, north of Baghdad.</P>
<P>Al-Maliki, a Shiite, has been accused of being overly tough on Sunnis
while looking the other way when dealing with the transgressions of Shiite
groups, including al-Sadr's Mehdi Army militia. Al-Sadr's backing for
al-Maliki as prime minister helped him get that job.</P><A target=_blank
name=1></A><A target=_blank name=rv1></A>
<H3>Memo considers Shiite power</H3>
<P>The memo talks of the Mehdi Army's "escalation of killings" and a
series of trends that "suggest a campaign to consolidate Shia power in
Baghdad." The Mehdi Army is considered a major participant in the
sectarian warfare raging in Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq.</P>
<P>The memo said there are reports of "intervention by the prime
minister's office to stop military action against Shia targets and to
encourage them against Sunni ones, removal of Iraq's most effective
commanders on a sectarian basis and efforts to ensure Shia majorities in
all ministries."</P>
<P>The report said it isn't clear that al-Maliki is "a witting
participant" in this push for Shiite power, but "the reality on the
streets of Baghdad suggests Maliki is either ignorant of what is going on,
misrepresenting his intentions, or that his capabilities are not yet
sufficient to turn his good intentions into action."</P>
<P>"The information he receives is undoubtedly skewed by his small circle
of Dawa advisers, coloring his actions and interpretation of reality. His
intentions seem good when he talks with Americans, and sensitive reporting
suggests he is trying to stand up to the Shia hierarchy and force positive
change," the memo said. It was referring to al-Maliki's Dawa Party, one of
the major Shiite political movements in Iraq.</P>
<P>Because of such problems, the memo concluded that "we returned from
Iraq convinced we need to determine if Prime Minister [al-]Maliki is both
willing and able to rise above the sectarian agendas being promoted by
others."</P>
<P>"Do we and Prime Minister [al-]Maliki share the same vision for Iraq?"
the memo asks.</P>
<P>Despite the expressed concerns, the memo lays out extensive steps the
United States can take to help the Iraqi leader, including boosting his
political base and fortifying the country's security capabilities.</P>
<P class=cnnSCAttribution>CNN's Suzanne Malveaux and Ed Payne contributed
to this report.</P></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></DIV><!--Article End--><!--Bibliography Goes Here-->
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<DIV><SPAN class=fonttitle>Find this article at:</SPAN> <BR><A
href="http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/11/29/maliki/index.html">http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/11/29/maliki/index.html</A></DIV>
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<CENTER><A href="http://www.time.com/time"><IMG height=50
src="http://img.timeinc.net/time/images/print_logo.gif" width=214
border=0></A><BR></CENTER><!--BEGIN MAIN BANNER AND HEADLINE GIF--><IMG
height=37 src="http://img.timeinc.net/time/images/slugs/world.gif" width=487
border=0><BR><!--BEGIN DATE STAMP--><SPAN class=date>Wednesday, Nov. 29,
2006</SPAN><BR><!--END DATE STAMP--><SPAN class=headline>Bush and Maliki: A
Summit of Lame Ducks</SPAN><BR><SPAN class=subhead>Analysis: Whatever the U.S.
President and Iraq's Prime Minister promise after their talks in Jordan, neither
man really has the power to deliver</SPAN><BR><SPAN class=byline>By</SPAN> <SPAN
class=byline>APARISIM GHOSH/BAGHDAD</SPAN>
<P>There's a reason why Iraqis aren't holding their breath over the Amman
summit: Viewed from Baghdad, both George Bush and Nuri al-Maliki are lame ducks.
As he winds down his second term, the American president is burdened with a
hostile Senate and Congress — not to mention mounting public dissatisfaction
with his performance. The Iraqi Prime Minister is less than six months into his
first term, and already he faces the same problems. </P>
<P>As a result, whatever deal the two men agree in Jordan — they have a dinner
meeting Wednesday and a breakfast confab Thursday — it's unlikely that either
man has the political clout back home to make it stick. </P>
<P>In the lead-up to the summit, Bush has struck an aggressive pose, insisting
U.S. troops will remain in Iraq until the mission is accomplished, and denying
that the country is in the throes of a civil war. But he faces mounting calls
from Democrats — and not a few Republicans — to bring the troops home. And,
academic debates aside, most Iraqis have known for months that they are in the
middle of a civil war. Now major American news organizations have started to use
that term, to the Administration's helpless chagrin. </P>
<P>It's a war Al-Maliki has done virtually nothing to try and stop — and he has
frequently obstructed U.S. military efforts to do so. The Iraqi Prime Minister
arrived in Jordan a thoroughly weakened and discredited figure: Over the
weekend, he endured the ignominy of having his convoy booed and pelted with
stones by his fellow Shi'ites in Sadr City, where he had gone to pay condolences
after a series of car bombs killed over 215 people on Thanksgiving Day. As
al-Maliki left Baghdad, the Iraqi capital was wracked by continuing violence,
and his key political allies were threatening to boycott parliament over his
decision to meet with Bush. </P>
<P>Already unpopular with Sunnis — who view him as a Shi'ite partisan — he has
also lost what little credibility he had with his cosectarians. As a result, his
writ doesn't run very far outside of the artificial bubble of Baghdad's Green
Zone. </P>
<P>The final straw for al-Maliki may be the fact that the guarantors of his
power — the Bush administration — have lost confidence in him. Reports on
Wednesday say National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley told Bush in a classified
memo that the Iraqi Prime Minister was isolated, out of touch with reality and
unable to affect the course of events. </P>
<P>"He impressed me as a leader who wanted to be strong but was having
difficulty figuring out how to do so," Hadley said, according to an extract of
the memo published by the New York Times. "But the reality on the streets of
Baghdad suggests Maliki is either ignorant of what is going on, misrepresenting
his intentions or that his capabilities are not yet sufficient to turn his good
intentions into actions." </P>
<P>Hadley said al-Maliki receives "skewed" information from his advisers about
the world outside the Green Zone. And for all his claims to represent all
Iraqis, regardless of sect and ethnicity, the Prime Minister has been unwilling
to halt a Shi'ite campaign to consolidate power. </P>
<P>For months now, al-Maliki has promised to deal with the sectarian violence
with "an iron fist" — that's his expression. He will undoubtedly make similar
promises in the course of his visit to Jordan. But Iraqis have learned from
bitter experience that their lame duck leader does little more than quack.
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