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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    US policy reveals five candidates for the "Sorrow" to the Prime Minister of Iraq

    Rocky
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     US policy reveals five candidates for the "Sorrow" to the Prime Minister of Iraq Empty US policy reveals five candidates for the "Sorrow" to the Prime Minister of Iraq

    Post by Rocky Mon 25 Jun 2018, 12:13 pm

    [size=32]
    US policy reveals five candidates for the "Sorrow" to the Prime Minister of Iraq[/size]
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     3 hours ago




    The New York Times published a report on Monday on the alliance between the two blocs, "victory" announced by the leader of the Sadrist movement Moqtada al-Sadr, and Prime Minister Haider Abadi, the first in the city of Najaf.
    Abadi leads the "victory" bloc, which won the third place in the recent legislative elections, while the block, "Sarun" backed by Sadr ranked first.
    "This announcement came as a surprise to many political observers, especially that Sadr, the winner of the elections, had already announced his alliance with a pro-Iranian Shiite leader, Hadi al-Ameri, whose mass came in the second order according to the results of the elections."
    "While he was once a wanted person for US authorities during the occupation of Iraq, Sadr remained a critic of the Americans while distancing himself from Iran at the same time, presenting himself as a non-sectarian figure."
    "Despite al-Sadr's harsh rhetoric against the Americans in the past, he has become more lenient towards them since last month's election, and his speech in Najaf on Saturday also played down any criticism of the United States," the paper said.
    "The alliance of both Abadi and Sadr that their new alliance does not mean the end of the alliance with al-Amiri."
    According to the press, US military officials, who have about 4,500 troops in Iraq and Syria, face a difficult decision on how to deal with a Sadr-dominated government and other leaders such as Amiri, who have close ties to Tehran, at a time when Trump's management of the nuclear agreement with Iran " .
    Sadr won a surprise victory in the May 12 parliamentary elections, which have had the lowest voter turnout since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime in 2003. But no bloc has won enough seats to form a government unless the blocs negotiate among themselves to form multi- And limbs.
    The results of the elections are also subject to many appeals alleging cases of fraud with the approval of the outgoing parliament to re-counting and manual counting of votes, a decision supported by the Federal Supreme Court.
    It was also unclear whether the new coalition would bring Iraqi political parties closer to a decision that would reveal who would head the next government.
    The paper noted that on the complex electoral map of Iraq does not appear any of the four largest blocs within the majority-Shiite blocs to have enough seats even if allied with other Shiite parties to be able to form a government and the selection of a new prime minister. This means that this will lead to the formation of a broader alliance of Sunni and Kurdish parties.
    It is not clear whether the leaders of the political alliance, Abadi and Sadr, agreed on any candidate as an option for them to be prime minister, according to the report.
    The newspaper quoted Jaafar al-Moussawi, a political spokesman for Sadr, said that the Sadr alliance now has five candidates under study for the post of prime minister.
    Political analysts have said the recent alliance is a movement to bring together all the Shia parties, but it has also increased the fog of who will emerge as a new leader of the government.
    "Two or three days ago, we thought that the prime minister candidate might be Hadi al-Amiri, but now there is talk about Haidar al-Abadi's nomination for the post again," said Wathiq al-Hashemi, head of the Center for Strategic Studies in Baghdad.
     



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