Difference between revisions of "Mithal al-Alusi"

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'''Mithal Al-Alusi''' (b. 1953, Iraq) is a former Iraqi member of the Iraqi Council of Representatives, but after he was fired from that post he postures as the founder of the [[Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation]].
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[[Mithal al-Alusi]] is a former Iraqi exile who led a group which stormed the Iraqi embassy in Berlin in 2002. Following his conviction over the incident, he skipped bail to return to Iraq.
  
On 12 June 2008, the Henry Jackson Society announced a talk by al-Alusi at the House of Commons, and provided this profile:
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In Iraq, he acted as spokesman for [[Iraqi National Congress]] chief [[Ahmad Chalabi]], and became director of the Debaathification Commission which Chalabi chaired. However, he was expelled from the INC in 2004 over a visit to Israel for a conference at the [[Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya]]. Al-Alusi remained active in Iraqi politics, forming his own party. He continued to advocate closer links with Israel, attending Herzliya conferences in 2005 and 2008.
<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">'''Mithal al-Alusi''' is an elected member of the Iraqi Council of Representatives. He founded the Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation in 2005 after he was sacked from his ministerial position by his previous party, the Iraqi National Congress, for visiting Israel and daring to express the hope that there might be peace between the countries. He regularly speaks out against extremist parties and sectarianism, and paid the ultimate price for his outspoken stand when his two sons were killed in an assassination attempt aimed at his car. Despite this horrific loss, he has courageously stuck to his convictions and refuses to back down from expressing them. Mr al-Alusi is a Sunni Arab secularist politician and previously served as the General Director of Culture and Media at the Higher National Commission for De-Baathification.<ref>Announcement of the talk: "The Future of Iraq", House of Commons, 23 June 2008.</ref> </blockquote>  
+
 
 +
==Career==
 +
Al-Alusi is a former [[Ba'ath Party]]  member who had worked at the party's top secret school for political cadres before falling out with the regime in the 1970s.<ref>OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.</ref>
 +
 
 +
While studying in Egypt in 1976, al-Alusi was sentenced to death in absentia for allegedly trying to undermine [[Saddam Hussein]]. He later moved to Syria and then Germany.<ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/09/21/news/ML-Iraq-Friend-of-Israel.php Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price], International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Berlin Embassy incident===
 +
Al-Alusi led a group which stormed the Iraqi embassy in Berlin on 20 August 2002. According to prosecutors al-Alusi recruited five Iraqis aged from 33 to 44 and led the incident by mobile telephone.The five entered the embassy building armed with an 8mm pistol, an axe and a device for firing an irritant gas, and held four people, including the Iraqi charge d'affaires [[Shamir Mohammed]]. Prosecutors accused the group of threatening to kill staff and said that shots were fired and tear gas used on the victims. The incident ended when the building was stormed by police. Al-Alusi acted as spokesman for an obscure group called the [[Democratic Iraqi opposition of Germany]] which claimed responsibility for the incident.<ref>Iraqi opposition members in Berlin hostage drama face court, by Fabien Noval, Agence France Press, 26 March 2003.</ref>
 +
 
 +
Al-Alusi testified that the group was seeking evidence of plans to liquidate Iraqi opposition figures.He was convicted on 3 September 2003 of hostage-taking, causing bodily harm and trespassing, and was sentenced to three years and three months in prison. He was, however, freed pending an appeal and ordered to report several times a week to German authorities.<ref>Berlin court convicts six in Iraqi embassy siege, Associated Press Worldstream, 3 September 2003.</ref>He had already spent 13 months in prison at this time. <ref>OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.</ref>He returned to Iraq in November 2003, violating his bail conditions. A spokesman for the Berlin state court said in 2004 that al-Alusi would be arrested if he returned to Germany.<ref>Official in charge of de-Baathification program wanted by Germany in 2002 embassy takeover, by Scheherezade Faramarzi, Associated Press, 7 June 2004.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===De-Baathification Commission===
 +
Al-Alusi was appointed director of the [[Supreme National Commission for De-Baathification]], of which [[Ahmad Chalabi]] had been made chairman in September 2003. Under al-Alusi, the Commission and its files were a major powerbase for Chalabi, giving him leverage over members of the Iraqi government.<ref>OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.</ref>
 +
 
 +
The Commission began its work in January 2004. By November, according to al-Alusi, 35,000 party members had left their jobs.<ref>OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.</ref>
 +
::One of the steps in the appeals process for former Baathists was attendance at a thirty-day de-Baathification course, and I asked Alusi what model he had used for it. "I've studied the de-Nazification of Germany," he said. "And I've e-mailed Jewish Holocaust organizations, although only one of them answered me. We've read a lot of books."<ref>OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.</ref>
 +
 
 +
Criticism of the de-Ba'athification policy led the US to reinstate 10,000 teachers in May 2004, a policy with which al-Alusi was uncomfortable:
 +
::The decision to re-employ so many Ba'athists, he argues, may be seen as an appeasement of the insurgency, and he suggests there are more than 71,000 teachers looking for work who have no Ba'ath background and would make better teachers. "The Ba'athists were here for 35 years, they are many in number, they have many weapons," he said. "One night they left and now they want to return."<ref>Iraq conflict: Ba'athist teachers prepare to go back to the classroom: Disquiet as 10,000 staff are reinstated in a rethink of the US aim to 'extirpate Saddam's party', by Rory McCarthy, The Guardian, 1 May 2004.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Chalabi spokesman===
 +
In June 2004, al-Alusi released a document, allegedly from Iraqi intelligence files, which he said showed that Ahmad Chalabi's 1992 conviction for bank fraud in Jordan had been handled improperly. The [[Associated Press]] could not verify the authenticity of the documents:
 +
::Chalabi's spokesman, Mithal al-Alusi, said on Tuesday that the rough document, which is not on official letterhead and carries no seals or official markings, suggests that the military court that convicted Chalabi was created improperly and ignored the true suspects in the case. The case should be retried by a civilian court, al-Alusi said.<ref>
 +
Chalabi aide: Jordanian fraud conviction handled improperly, by Jim Krane, the Associated Press, 8 June 2004.</ref>
 +
 
 +
In September 2004, al-Alusi acted as spokesman for Chalabi following a reported assassination attempt on the INC leader.<ref>Iraq: Chalabi survives assassination attempt in Baghdad, Al-Bawaba, 1 September 2004.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Herzliya conference 2004===
 +
In September 2004, al-Alusi attended the [[Global Impact of Terrorism conference]], the fifth international conference of the [[International Institute for Counter-Terrorism]] at the [[Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center]].<ref>[http://portal.idc.ac.il/en/main/about_idc/president_office/Documents/IDC%20Update%20-%20Spring-Summer%202005.pdf IDC Update - Spring-Summer 2005], Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center, accessed 26 January 2009.</ref>He was subsequently charged under a 1969 Iraqi law prohibiting contacts with enemy states.<ref>U.S. Forces Seize Iraqi City of Samarra, Bombs Wrack Capital; Frequent Attacks Belie Claims of Calm, Facts on File World News Digest, 7 October 2004.</ref>
 +
 
 +
According to Mideast Mirror, such overt contacts with Israel were widely seen as an embarrassment to Chalabi, which damaged the standing of the [[Iraqi National Congress]].<ref>Reports of Iraqi-Israeli entente, Mideast Mirror, 18 October 2004.</ref>Following the visit, al-Alusi was expelled from the INC. He then set up the [[Iraqi Nation Party]] which he described as a "liberal, secular and democratic party."<ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/09/21/news/ML-Iraq-Friend-of-Israel.php Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price], International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Assassination attempt===
 +
In February 2005, he survived an ambush in which two of his sons were killed. A former culture minister in the [[Nouri al-Maliki]] government, [[Asad Kamal al-Hashimi]] was sentenced in absentia for the attack in August 2008.<ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/09/21/news/ML-Iraq-Friend-of-Israel.php Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price], International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
When he was charged in June 2007, al-Hashimi claimed the move was an attempt by the Maliki government to push Sunnis out of politics. Al-Alusi in turn accused the US of sheltering al-Hashimi.<ref>Iraq War; U.S. GOP Senators Criticize Bush's Policy; Other Developments, Facts on File World News Digest, 28 June 2007.</ref>The Sunni [[Iraqi Accordance Front]] announced a boycott of cabinet meetings after al-Hashimi was charged.<ref>Iraq War; U.S. Implicates Iran in Deadly January Raid; Other Developments, Facts on File World News Digest, 5 July 2007.</ref>
 +
 
 +
By March 2008, when he was visited by German politician [[Elke Hoff]] was living in Baghdad's Green Zone. [[Der Spiegel]] nevertheless described him as one of the most popular politicians in postwar Iraq.<ref>Americans in Green Zone under siege, by Dieter Bednarz, Salon.com, 28 March 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Herzliya conference 2005===
 +
Al-Alusi spoke again at the [[5th Herzliya conference]] in September 2005.<ref>[[http://www.ict.org.il/AnnualConference/Highlights5thConference/tabid/93/Default.aspx Highlights 5th Conference]], International Institute for Counter-Terrorism, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, accessed 26 January 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Prague Conference 2005===
 +
Al-Alusi attended the Prague [[Democracy & Security International conference]] in June 2007.<ref>[http://www.democracyandsecurity.org/doc/List_of_Participants.pdf List of Participants], Democracy and Security International Conference, accessed 26 January 2009.</ref>Al-Alusi later said that President [[George W. Bush]] asked at the event how his wife was handling the event of his two sons. Al-Alusi highlighted the conversation later that month when the US allegedly intervened to prevent the arrest of Asad Kamal al-Hashimi in the case.<ref>Moment of Truth, editorial, New York Sun, 29 June 2007.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Herzliya conference 2008===
 +
In September 2008, al-Alusi attended the [[8th Herzliya conference]] at the [[International Institute for Counterterrorism]] in Israel.
 +
::"He wasn't set to speak, but he was in the audience and conversed with a lecturer on a panel about insurgency and terrorism in Afghanistan, Iraq and Israel," said conference organizer [[Eitan Azani]]. "We didn't invite him. He came on his own initiative."<ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/09/21/news/ML-Iraq-Friend-of-Israel.php Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price], International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
Al-Alusi called for increased intelligence co-operation between Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Turkey and the US during a surprise speech to the conference:
 +
::During a panel dedicated to the lessons of the battle against guerrillas in Iraq, Afghanistan and Israel, the master of ceremonies surprised listeners when he said Al-Alusi was in the audience and invited him to the podium. Al-Alusi was received with roaring applause. "In Israel, there is no occupation, there is liberalism," Al-Alusi, who is making his third trip to the Jewish State, told the audience. "We not only have elections but also a democratic education. Throughout Iraq, there are people who have never gone to school and have not participated in the election. Today they know there's such a thing as democratic elections."<ref>[http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1221034882048&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull Iraqi MP visits IDC conference], Jerusalem Post, 10 September 2008.</ref>
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 +
According to the [[New York Sun]], al-Alusi had attended the conference for the past four years.<ref>Al-Alusi and Israel, editorial, New York Sun, 16 September 2008.</ref>However UPI reported that the conference was only al-Alusi's third trip to Israel.<ref>[http://www.upi.com/Emerging_Threats/2008/09/11/Iraqi_lawmaker_seeks_relations_with_Israel/UPI-87691221158477/Iraqi lawmaker seeks relations with Israel], United Press International, 11 September 2008.</ref>
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 +
Shortly after the conference, the Iraqi Parliament voted to strip him of his immunity, allowing him to be prosecuted for visiting Israel.<ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/09/21/news/ML-Iraq-Friend-of-Israel.php Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price], International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.</ref>The decision was overturned in November 2008 by the supreme court, which ruled that the Parliament's action was "illegal and unconstitutional because the current constitution does not prevent citizens from traveling to any country in the world."<ref>Court: Iraq lawmaker can't be prosecuted for trip, by Sameer N. Yacoub, Associated Press, 26 November 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Views==
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 +
Al-Alusi was one of the few Sunni politicians who supported a vote in favour of the proposed Iraqi constitution in the referendum of 15 October 2005.<ref>The Sunni Question, by Scott Johnson; With Michael Hastings and Joe Cochrane in Baghdad, Newsweek, 5 September 2005.</ref>
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 +
al-Alusi accused rival Sunni politicians of supporting [[Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi]] following the latter's death in 2006.<ref>Fighting Zarqawi's Legacy; by Rod Nordland and Michael Hirsh; With Mark Hosenball in Toronto, Sarah Childress and Salih Mehdi in Baghdad, Ron Moreau and Sami Yousafzai in Kabul and Emily Vencat in London, Newsweek, 19 June 2006.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===On Israel===
 +
::Al-Alusi said Iraq should follow Jordan and Egypt in seeking peace with Israel, especially since Syria is moving in that direction. He insists Israel would have to make concessions to the Palestinians.
 +
 
 +
::"We should act now because if the Syrian-Israel talks succeed, this means that Iraq will be isolated," he said. "It's the right time to open a new phase with Israel."<ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/09/21/news/ML-Iraq-Friend-of-Israel.php Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price], International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===On Iran===
 +
::"Iran is behind Hamas and Hezbollah and many other terrorist organizations. Israelis are suffering like me, like my people. So we need to be together," he said. "Peace will have more of a chance."<ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/09/21/news/ML-Iraq-Friend-of-Israel.php Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price], International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
===On Muqtada al-Sadr===
 +
::"If he says, 'Kill Alusi,' I will be killed. If he says, 'Don't kill Alusi,' I will not be killed. ... Nobody can go against his orders or wishes."<ref>The Emperor of Iraq, by Christopher Beam and Blake Wilson, Slate Magazine, 27 November 2006.</ref>
 +
 
 +
==External Resources==
 +
*[http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=PnUTUNDtQLU Mithal Al-Alusi - speaks about the Iraqi Insurgency] - Youtube video of al-Alusi at the 5th Herzliya conference in 2005.
  
 
==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==
*[[Henry Jackson Society]]
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*[[Iraqi National Congress]] - former spokesman prior to expulsion.
*[[Democracy & Security International Conference]] panelist
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*[[Henry Jackson Society Project for Democratic Geopolitics]] - Event speaker
*[[Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation]] &ndash; founder (and most likely, the only member)
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*[[[[Democratic Iraqi opposition of Germany]]]] - spokesman
*[[Fighting for Democracy in the Islamic World]] &ndash; conference participant and featured "dissident"<ref>[http://www.ffdiw.org/dissidents_e.html FFDIW Profile] (Accessed: 13 June 2008)</ref>
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*[[Supreme National Commission for De-Baathification]] - former director
 +
*[[Iraqi Nation Party]] - Founder
 +
===Conferences===
 +
*[[4th Herzliya conference]] - participant
 +
*[[5th Herzliya conference]] - participant
 +
*[[Democracy & Security International Conference]] - participant.
 +
*[[8th Herzliya conference]] - participant
  
==Contact, References and Resources==
+
==References==
===Contact===
+
<references/>
===Resources===
 
*[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mithal_al-Alusi Wikipedia profile]]
 
  
===References===
+
[[category:Iraq|Al-Alusi, Mithal]][[category:Germany|Al-Alusi, Mithal]]
<references/>
 

Latest revision as of 15:18, 17 August 2010

Mithal al-Alusi is a former Iraqi exile who led a group which stormed the Iraqi embassy in Berlin in 2002. Following his conviction over the incident, he skipped bail to return to Iraq.

In Iraq, he acted as spokesman for Iraqi National Congress chief Ahmad Chalabi, and became director of the Debaathification Commission which Chalabi chaired. However, he was expelled from the INC in 2004 over a visit to Israel for a conference at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya. Al-Alusi remained active in Iraqi politics, forming his own party. He continued to advocate closer links with Israel, attending Herzliya conferences in 2005 and 2008.

Career

Al-Alusi is a former Ba'ath Party member who had worked at the party's top secret school for political cadres before falling out with the regime in the 1970s.[1]

While studying in Egypt in 1976, al-Alusi was sentenced to death in absentia for allegedly trying to undermine Saddam Hussein. He later moved to Syria and then Germany.[2]

Berlin Embassy incident

Al-Alusi led a group which stormed the Iraqi embassy in Berlin on 20 August 2002. According to prosecutors al-Alusi recruited five Iraqis aged from 33 to 44 and led the incident by mobile telephone.The five entered the embassy building armed with an 8mm pistol, an axe and a device for firing an irritant gas, and held four people, including the Iraqi charge d'affaires Shamir Mohammed. Prosecutors accused the group of threatening to kill staff and said that shots were fired and tear gas used on the victims. The incident ended when the building was stormed by police. Al-Alusi acted as spokesman for an obscure group called the Democratic Iraqi opposition of Germany which claimed responsibility for the incident.[3]

Al-Alusi testified that the group was seeking evidence of plans to liquidate Iraqi opposition figures.He was convicted on 3 September 2003 of hostage-taking, causing bodily harm and trespassing, and was sentenced to three years and three months in prison. He was, however, freed pending an appeal and ordered to report several times a week to German authorities.[4]He had already spent 13 months in prison at this time. [5]He returned to Iraq in November 2003, violating his bail conditions. A spokesman for the Berlin state court said in 2004 that al-Alusi would be arrested if he returned to Germany.[6]

De-Baathification Commission

Al-Alusi was appointed director of the Supreme National Commission for De-Baathification, of which Ahmad Chalabi had been made chairman in September 2003. Under al-Alusi, the Commission and its files were a major powerbase for Chalabi, giving him leverage over members of the Iraqi government.[7]

The Commission began its work in January 2004. By November, according to al-Alusi, 35,000 party members had left their jobs.[8]

One of the steps in the appeals process for former Baathists was attendance at a thirty-day de-Baathification course, and I asked Alusi what model he had used for it. "I've studied the de-Nazification of Germany," he said. "And I've e-mailed Jewish Holocaust organizations, although only one of them answered me. We've read a lot of books."[9]

Criticism of the de-Ba'athification policy led the US to reinstate 10,000 teachers in May 2004, a policy with which al-Alusi was uncomfortable:

The decision to re-employ so many Ba'athists, he argues, may be seen as an appeasement of the insurgency, and he suggests there are more than 71,000 teachers looking for work who have no Ba'ath background and would make better teachers. "The Ba'athists were here for 35 years, they are many in number, they have many weapons," he said. "One night they left and now they want to return."[10]

Chalabi spokesman

In June 2004, al-Alusi released a document, allegedly from Iraqi intelligence files, which he said showed that Ahmad Chalabi's 1992 conviction for bank fraud in Jordan had been handled improperly. The Associated Press could not verify the authenticity of the documents:

Chalabi's spokesman, Mithal al-Alusi, said on Tuesday that the rough document, which is not on official letterhead and carries no seals or official markings, suggests that the military court that convicted Chalabi was created improperly and ignored the true suspects in the case. The case should be retried by a civilian court, al-Alusi said.[11]

In September 2004, al-Alusi acted as spokesman for Chalabi following a reported assassination attempt on the INC leader.[12]

Herzliya conference 2004

In September 2004, al-Alusi attended the Global Impact of Terrorism conference, the fifth international conference of the International Institute for Counter-Terrorism at the Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center.[13]He was subsequently charged under a 1969 Iraqi law prohibiting contacts with enemy states.[14]

According to Mideast Mirror, such overt contacts with Israel were widely seen as an embarrassment to Chalabi, which damaged the standing of the Iraqi National Congress.[15]Following the visit, al-Alusi was expelled from the INC. He then set up the Iraqi Nation Party which he described as a "liberal, secular and democratic party."[16]

Assassination attempt

In February 2005, he survived an ambush in which two of his sons were killed. A former culture minister in the Nouri al-Maliki government, Asad Kamal al-Hashimi was sentenced in absentia for the attack in August 2008.[17]

When he was charged in June 2007, al-Hashimi claimed the move was an attempt by the Maliki government to push Sunnis out of politics. Al-Alusi in turn accused the US of sheltering al-Hashimi.[18]The Sunni Iraqi Accordance Front announced a boycott of cabinet meetings after al-Hashimi was charged.[19]

By March 2008, when he was visited by German politician Elke Hoff was living in Baghdad's Green Zone. Der Spiegel nevertheless described him as one of the most popular politicians in postwar Iraq.[20]

Herzliya conference 2005

Al-Alusi spoke again at the 5th Herzliya conference in September 2005.[21]

Prague Conference 2005

Al-Alusi attended the Prague Democracy & Security International conference in June 2007.[22]Al-Alusi later said that President George W. Bush asked at the event how his wife was handling the event of his two sons. Al-Alusi highlighted the conversation later that month when the US allegedly intervened to prevent the arrest of Asad Kamal al-Hashimi in the case.[23]

Herzliya conference 2008

In September 2008, al-Alusi attended the 8th Herzliya conference at the International Institute for Counterterrorism in Israel.

"He wasn't set to speak, but he was in the audience and conversed with a lecturer on a panel about insurgency and terrorism in Afghanistan, Iraq and Israel," said conference organizer Eitan Azani. "We didn't invite him. He came on his own initiative."[24]

Al-Alusi called for increased intelligence co-operation between Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Turkey and the US during a surprise speech to the conference:

During a panel dedicated to the lessons of the battle against guerrillas in Iraq, Afghanistan and Israel, the master of ceremonies surprised listeners when he said Al-Alusi was in the audience and invited him to the podium. Al-Alusi was received with roaring applause. "In Israel, there is no occupation, there is liberalism," Al-Alusi, who is making his third trip to the Jewish State, told the audience. "We not only have elections but also a democratic education. Throughout Iraq, there are people who have never gone to school and have not participated in the election. Today they know there's such a thing as democratic elections."[25]

According to the New York Sun, al-Alusi had attended the conference for the past four years.[26]However UPI reported that the conference was only al-Alusi's third trip to Israel.[27]

Shortly after the conference, the Iraqi Parliament voted to strip him of his immunity, allowing him to be prosecuted for visiting Israel.[28]The decision was overturned in November 2008 by the supreme court, which ruled that the Parliament's action was "illegal and unconstitutional because the current constitution does not prevent citizens from traveling to any country in the world."[29]

Views

Al-Alusi was one of the few Sunni politicians who supported a vote in favour of the proposed Iraqi constitution in the referendum of 15 October 2005.[30]

al-Alusi accused rival Sunni politicians of supporting Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi following the latter's death in 2006.[31]

On Israel

Al-Alusi said Iraq should follow Jordan and Egypt in seeking peace with Israel, especially since Syria is moving in that direction. He insists Israel would have to make concessions to the Palestinians.
"We should act now because if the Syrian-Israel talks succeed, this means that Iraq will be isolated," he said. "It's the right time to open a new phase with Israel."[32]

On Iran

"Iran is behind Hamas and Hezbollah and many other terrorist organizations. Israelis are suffering like me, like my people. So we need to be together," he said. "Peace will have more of a chance."[33]

On Muqtada al-Sadr

"If he says, 'Kill Alusi,' I will be killed. If he says, 'Don't kill Alusi,' I will not be killed. ... Nobody can go against his orders or wishes."[34]

External Resources

Affiliations

Conferences

References

  1. OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.
  2. Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price, International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.
  3. Iraqi opposition members in Berlin hostage drama face court, by Fabien Noval, Agence France Press, 26 March 2003.
  4. Berlin court convicts six in Iraqi embassy siege, Associated Press Worldstream, 3 September 2003.
  5. OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.
  6. Official in charge of de-Baathification program wanted by Germany in 2002 embassy takeover, by Scheherezade Faramarzi, Associated Press, 7 June 2004.
  7. OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.
  8. OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.
  9. OUT ON THE STREET; The United States' de-Baathification program fuelled the insurgency. Is it too late for Bush to change course? by Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, 15 November 2004.
  10. Iraq conflict: Ba'athist teachers prepare to go back to the classroom: Disquiet as 10,000 staff are reinstated in a rethink of the US aim to 'extirpate Saddam's party', by Rory McCarthy, The Guardian, 1 May 2004.
  11. Chalabi aide: Jordanian fraud conviction handled improperly, by Jim Krane, the Associated Press, 8 June 2004.
  12. Iraq: Chalabi survives assassination attempt in Baghdad, Al-Bawaba, 1 September 2004.
  13. IDC Update - Spring-Summer 2005, Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center, accessed 26 January 2009.
  14. U.S. Forces Seize Iraqi City of Samarra, Bombs Wrack Capital; Frequent Attacks Belie Claims of Calm, Facts on File World News Digest, 7 October 2004.
  15. Reports of Iraqi-Israeli entente, Mideast Mirror, 18 October 2004.
  16. Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price, International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.
  17. Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price, International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.
  18. Iraq War; U.S. GOP Senators Criticize Bush's Policy; Other Developments, Facts on File World News Digest, 28 June 2007.
  19. Iraq War; U.S. Implicates Iran in Deadly January Raid; Other Developments, Facts on File World News Digest, 5 July 2007.
  20. Americans in Green Zone under siege, by Dieter Bednarz, Salon.com, 28 March 2008.
  21. [Highlights 5th Conference], International Institute for Counter-Terrorism, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, accessed 26 January 2008.
  22. List of Participants, Democracy and Security International Conference, accessed 26 January 2009.
  23. Moment of Truth, editorial, New York Sun, 29 June 2007.
  24. Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price, International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.
  25. Iraqi MP visits IDC conference, Jerusalem Post, 10 September 2008.
  26. Al-Alusi and Israel, editorial, New York Sun, 16 September 2008.
  27. lawmaker seeks relations with Israel, United Press International, 11 September 2008.
  28. Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price, International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.
  29. Court: Iraq lawmaker can't be prosecuted for trip, by Sameer N. Yacoub, Associated Press, 26 November 2008.
  30. The Sunni Question, by Scott Johnson; With Michael Hastings and Joe Cochrane in Baghdad, Newsweek, 5 September 2005.
  31. Fighting Zarqawi's Legacy; by Rod Nordland and Michael Hirsh; With Mark Hosenball in Toronto, Sarah Childress and Salih Mehdi in Baghdad, Ron Moreau and Sami Yousafzai in Kabul and Emily Vencat in London, Newsweek, 19 June 2006.
  32. Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price, International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.
  33. Iraqi's Warmth for Israel Exacts a Heavy Price, International Herald Tribune, 21 September 2008.
  34. The Emperor of Iraq, by Christopher Beam and Blake Wilson, Slate Magazine, 27 November 2006.