Baghdad - Arabstoday
Iraq’s Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki will seek to showcase his country’s diplomatic return to the region this week when leaders gather for the first Arab League summit in Baghdad in two decades, and the only one hosted by a Shia Arab ruler. With violence from its war waning and the last US troops gone, Iraq is keen to present itself as more stable and re-assert its clout in an often hostile Arab region, where the Iraqi Shia-led government’s rise riled Sunni Arab Gulf neighbours. Neighbouring Syria’s upheaval will dominate the three-day summit among the Arab League leaders, who have been split over how to react to the violence between government troops and rebels trying to oust President Bashar al-Assad. Wary of the region’s delicate sectarian makeup, Baghdad must balance a fledgling detente with Sunni Arabs deeply suspicious of Iraq’s ties to Shia power Iran against calls for it to take a stronger stance against Tehran’s main Arab ally Syria. The summit also comes at a sensitive time for Maliki, who is emerging from a crisis that threatened to scuttle Iraq’s power-sharing deal among Sunni, Shia and Kurds and renewed regional fears Iraq might slide once again into sectarian violence. Visiting dignitaries will get a glimpse of an Iraq whose long conflict has ebbed, but also see an OPEC member whose population still struggles with the daily threat of bombings, power shortages and a crumbling infrastructure nine years after the US invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein, a Sunni. Far from normalcy, tight security has converted Baghdad into a maze of checkpoints and roadblocks with thousands of extra troops drafted in to try to guarantee insurgents cannot damage the summit with bombings or mortar attacks. At least nine leaders, including U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon and officials from countries ranging from Kuwait to Somalia, plan to visit for the summit held in the expansive former Saddam-era palace complete with a lake. Iraq wants to highlight the attendance of officials, even if not top leaders, from Sunni nations like Saudi Arabia and Qatar, as a sign of progress in a neighbourhood long wary of the rise of Iraq’s Shia majority since the fall of Saddam. “What does it mean for a country like Saudi Arabia to be in Baghdad, it is very important,” Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari told a press briefing on Monday. “It’s a huge change, it is a major leap... for Iraq.” Acrimony with its Sunni Gulf neighbours had twice delayed the summit, especially over a crackdown by Bahrain’s Sunni rulers on Shia protesters when fellow Sunni monarchies Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates sent in troops to help. In the weeks before the meeting, Iraq pursued a steady campaign of detente with Gulf nations. Saudi Arabia named its first envoy in two decades, Kuwait reached a $500 million deal to end a Gulf War-era standoff over debt, and Baghdad paid $408 million to Egyptian workers who fled the Gulf War. The summit will be held as Sunni powers and Shia Iran increasingly jockey for more influence in the Middle East, split along sectarian lines over Syria’s crisis and Western sanctions on Tehran. Sunni powers like Qatar and Saudi Arabia are also likely to keep pushing for Iraq to take a stronger stance on Syria, where Baghdad has taken a more measured position and rejected economic sanctions called for by the Arab League. But breaking that deadlock will be difficult. “No big decisions are expected from the Baghdad summit, but the biggest gain is the return of convening routine Arab summits after the halt last year, and also the return of Iraq to the Arab arena,” Sudan’s representative to the Arab League, Kamal Hassan Ali, told Reuters. Sprucing up, emerging from crisis Days before the summit, workers were still busy cleaning up Baghdad’s hotels, sprucing up the trunk road from the airport and painting checkered yellow paving stones around the city in touch-ups to a capital long blighted by violence. Authorities spent hundreds of millions on the summit, upsetting some Iraqis who still live with frail basic services and intermittent power supplies that force them to rely on generators during blackouts. The government declared a five-day holiday over the course of the summit to ease the congestion. But the labyrinth of checkpoints that has virtually locked down the city is forcing many to walk instead of drive, and has frustrated even those used to dealing with security hassles. “I am a young man and even I feel tired of walking, I don’t know what is the benefit of this summit for me or for others,” said Baghdad resident Mohammed Hussein, 22. Even with a lock down, security remains a key worry. Iraq’s al-Qaeda affiliate, still potent despite setbacks, claimed responsibility for dozens of attacks across the country last week that killed 52 people to undermine summit security. For Maliki, the summit also offers an opportunity to shore up his position after he emerged from the country’s worst political crisis in a year. It was triggered just days after the withdrawal of the last American troops from Iraq in December. The turmoil erupted after Maliki sought to oust one Sunni rival and sideline another in measures many Iraqi Sunni Arabs believed were an attempt to consolidate his Shia coalition’s power at their expense. The crisis has since eased and Shia, Sunni and Kurdish political blocs are haggling over a meeting next month on resolving differences on power sharing, territorial disputes and how best to share out the country’s oil wealth. “If they manage to pull this off, it will be a huge boon to the legitimacy of the government,” said Gala Riani, an analyst at Control Risks. “There is a lot of pressure on the government. There is a lot of discontent amongst ordinary Iraqis.”