Following are excerpts
from an interview with Iraqi MP Ayad Jamal Al-Din, which aired on Al-Fayhaa
TV on February 9, 2010.
Ayad Jamal Al-Din:
The entire political process in Iraq was made possible solely by American
efforts. It was the US that entered Baghdad, toppled Saddam, and ruled
Iraq for a while, through Ambassador Bremer, and what ensued is known
to all.
The US is not a bunch
of teenagers or children, whose political conduct is reckless, like
the conduct of Saddam and perhaps some of the current Arab leaders.
The US is a country with institutions, plans, and a strategy. The work
they do in Iraq is not futile or juvenile. It's not that they topple
Saddam one day, and bring 'Izzat Al-Dori to power the next day. That's
not how it works.
When the US entered Iraq,
it aroused the fear of countries that are not part of the American camp
– Iran and Syria, to be precise. These are two independent countries
that have nothing to do with the US. As for Jordan, the Gulf countries,
and Egypt – these are American countries par excellence. This
is no secret. These countries do not, and cannot, deny it. These countries
are part of the [American] lobby, and are considered strategic allies
of the United States. They cannot object to the US will, or oppose its
efforts and decisions.
The planes and tanks
that toppled Saddam – where were they launched from? From the Gulf
states, Jordan, and Egypt. These countries played a real role in these
efforts – supporting the US with money, with intelligence, and even
with soldiers. When one of the Gulf leaders writes his memoirs, you
will know how many soldiers, from the Gulf and elsewhere, participated
in the toppling of the Saddam Hussein regime.
[...]
I cannot blame Iran or
Syria for being terrified by the US presence in Iraq. These countries
are afraid. They say: We are the enemies of the US, and vice versa.
Now the US is in Iraq.
But as for the weak Gulf
states – they are as happy as can be that Iraq has become American.
It is the American Iraq that defends them and protects their stability.
[...]
Iraqi politicians –
both party leaders and state officials – have voiced doubts about
the US, and have said that the US wants to restore the Ba'th Party,
and that the US has surrendered to the Sunni Arab countries, which want
to restore Sunni rule in Iraq. All this talk has nothing to do with
politics or with logic.
The US brought the seed
of democracy, and planted it in a land alien to democracy. The US will
continue to cultivate this seed, until the tree grows and offers shade
to the region in its entirety.
Iraq is the beacon of
democracy [in the Middle East]. The American democracy in Iraq terrifies
Iran, first and foremost. Anyone who tries to say otherwise does not
understand the political reality, or else he speaks on behalf of Iran.
Iran does not want to
see a single US soldier in Iraq even for one moment. This is Iran's
legitimate right. I'm not saying it isn't. But it is better for us,
the Iraqis, for our country to be a democracy, sponsored by the strongest
power in the world, the US, and for all America's friends to be our
friends as well.
[...]
We reject Iranian influence
and money, as well as Saudi money. If the money of Saudi businessmen
is used to support some impulsive people – we reject it as well. The
Iraqi people reject both catastrophes – that of the Rule of the Jurisprudent
and that of Wahhabism.