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IRAQ WARS
Chalabi, key lobbyist for US-led invasion of Iraq, dies
By W.G. Dunlop
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 3, 2015


Chalabi: Iraqi dissident who enabled US-led invasion
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 3, 2015 - Ahmed Chalabi was a key figure in enabling and encouraging the US-led invasion of Iraq, but came to embody the poor American planning and unrealistic expectations that doomed his country to disaster.

Chalabi, 71, died of a heart attack in Baghdad more than a decade after realising his dream of overthrowing Saddam Hussein, but not the political power he had hoped to wield after the dictator's fall.

Washington's reliance on information from Chalabi to justify the 2003 invasion and its misplaced belief that he and his opposition Iraqi National Congress could govern post-Saddam helped drag the US into a nine-year quagmire.

Chalabi was born in October 1944 to a wealthy Baghdad family, but left the country in 1956 and spent most of his life in Britain and the United States, where he received a doctorate in mathematics.

His exile endeared him to Western officials, but meant he avoided the long years of suffering in his home country caused by war, sanctions and dictatorship, leaving him detached from the people he claimed to represent.

Chalabi founded the INC along with other figures opposed to Saddam in 1992 and organised a Kurdish uprising in northern Iraq in the mid-1990s.

But the uprising failed, hundreds of people were killed and he later fled, only returning when US-led invading forces took control.

Undaunted, he gave a steady stream of briefings that were used to bolster the case for the war.

Key figures in president George W. Bush's administration hoped Chalabi and the INC might take over as an interim government after Saddam's ouster.

But because of its long years abroad, his group was little known and little liked inside Iraq and American plans for a smooth and easy political transition fell apart.

- False intelligence, graft allegations -

Disastrous US moves such as disbanding the Iraqi army, an insufficient number of coalition troops to secure the country against insurgency and rising sectarian tensions instead led to years of bloodshed that continue to this day.

Chalabi was the darling of Washington in 2003, but lost favour after the invasion when information he provided regarding Saddam's alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction and links to Al-Qaeda turned out to be false.

He was also accused of providing information to US foe Iran.

Iraqi police and US forces raided his home in 2004 and seized documents and computers. The only formal charge was putting forged banknotes into circulation after the raid turned up a small number in his home.

Chalabi was dogged by repeated allegations of corruption and was convicted by a Jordanian court of embezzling funds from the collapsed Petra bank in 1992, a case he claims was politically motivated.

Following the invasion, Chalabi held the rotating presidency of the US-appointed Iraqi Governing Council, served as deputy prime minister, temporarily held the key oil portfolio and became a member of parliament.

But he never reached the political heights to which he aspired.

Chalabi, a secular Shiite, was also one of the main proponents of the "de-Baathification" drive to remove alleged Saddam supporters from public life, which alienated Iraq's Sunni Arab minority and fuelled the revolt against US-led forces.

Iraqi government policies in subsequent years further disenchanted Sunnis, and anger within the community ultimately laid the groundwork for the Islamic State jihadist group's seizure of large parts of the country last year.

Ahmed Chalabi, a key lobbyist for the US-led invasion of Iraq who was blamed for providing false intelligence on weapons of mass destruction to justify it, died of a heart attack Tuesday.

The 71-year-old head of parliament's finance committee "died this morning of a heart attack," Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said in a statement offering condolences for his death.

He "dedicated his life to opposing the dictatorial regime and played a major role in building the political process and democracy in Iraq," Abadi said.

Iraqi leaders including parliament speaker Salim al-Juburi, Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis, a senior commander of Shiite-majority volunteer forces and various top officers came to Chalabi's house to pay their respects, AFP journalists reported.

In a statement on his death, the interior ministry described Chalabi as having worked for the "salvation of the Iraqi people from dictatorship".

Living in exile as head of the Iraqi National Congress (INC), which opposed Saddam Hussein, Chalabi became a White House favourite for information he provided which supported the US justification for attacking Iraq in 2003.

But he lost favour after the invasion when information regarding Saddam's alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction and links to Al-Qaeda turned out to be false.

He was also accused of providing information to US foe Iran.

Iraqi police and US forces raided his home in May 2004 and seized documents and computers. The only formal charge laid was putting forged banknotes into circulation after the raid turned up a small number in his home.

Chalabi was long dogged by allegations of corruption and was convicted by a Jordanian court of embezzling funds from the collapsed Petra bank in 1992, a case he claims was politically motivated.

- 2003 'high point' -

Born in October 1944 to a wealthy Baghdad family, Chalabi left the country in 1956 and spent most of his life in Britain and the United States, where he received a doctorate in mathematics.

He organised a Kurdish uprising in northern Iraq in the mid-1990s but hundreds of people were killed and he later fled, returning only when US-led invading forces took control.

Undaunted, he provided a steady stream of briefings which were used to bolster the case for the 2003 war.

Key figures in US president George W. Bush's administration hoped Chalabi and the INC might take over Iraq as an interim government after the fall of Saddam.

But because of its long years outside Iraq, his group was little known and little liked at home. Plans for a smooth and easy political transition fell apart, and instead Iraq was plagued by years of bloodshed.

Following the invasion, Chalabi, a secular Shiite, was one of the main proponents of the "de-Baathification" drive to remove alleged Saddam supporters from public life, which alienated Iraq's Sunni Arab minority and fuelled the insurgency against US-led forces.

Chalabi held the rotating presidency of the US-appointed Iraqi Governing Council after the invasion, served as deputy prime minister and also temporarily held the key oil portfolio, but he never reached the political heights to which he aspired.

Chalabi's legacy is defined by his role in the 2003 invasion and to a lesser extent de-Baathification, said Kirk Sowell, the publisher of the Inside Iraqi Politics newsletter.

"He never influenced any major policy... after 2003," Sowell said. "That was his high point."


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