Prime Minister-designate
Nouri al-Maliki reported progress Tuesday in the formation of a Cabinet for
Iraq's new national unity government and said he hoped to complete the process
by the end of the week.
He said nominations for top positions in the Cabinet have been submitted by
Iraq's complex mix of Shiite, Sunni Arab and Kurdish groups.
"We have completed the nominations for the main posts and the sovereignty
ministries," he said at a news conference, referring to ministries such as
finance, defense and interior. "Just a few remain" to be decided, he said.
"At the end of this week, there will be the formation of the government,"
said al-Maliki.
He said the defense ministry, which controls Iraq's military, and the
interior ministry, which oversees the country's police forces, will by led by
independent ministers unaffiliated with the country's many militias. That has
been a key demand of the U.S.-led coalition.
Al-Maliki said discussions were still ongoing about the choice of the oil,
trade and transportation ministries.
He declined to name any of the nominees, saying that should be done when the
entire proposed Cabinet is announced. Parliament then must approve it by a
simple majority.
The news conference in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone came at a
pivotal time for al-Maliki who has been struggling since he was nominated as
prime minister last month to complete the final step in establishing the new
Iraqi government.
U.S. officials hope it will help calm sectarian tensions, lure Sunni Arabs
from the insurgency and eventually allow the withdrawal of some American forces.
The process has been riddled with ethnic and sectarian tension, and deadly
attacks by insurgents, and al-Maliki, a Shiite, has been working to balance the
conflicting interests of Shiite, Sunni Arab and Kurdish legislators.
Currently, the interior ministry, headed by Bayan Jabr, a Shiite, has come
under criticism from the Sunnis who say that Shiite "death squads" are routinely
targeting members of their community, further exacerbating a wave of reprisal
sectarian attacks.
Sunni Arabs have also jockeyed for some of the key sovereignty ministries
such as oil and finance, as well as the interior and defense portfolios.
But those posts have largely been allocated to the United Iraqi Alliance, the
Shiite bloc with the largest number of seats in the parliament.
They also have eyed the prominent foreign ministry, but lawmakers have
repeatedly said that this portfolio will remain in the hands of the Kurds, who
also hold the presidency.