November 30, 2009 • Vol. 15, No. 11
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FP: Iraq's Unheralded Political Progress

Jason Gluck of the Institute for Peace writes today on an unnoticed milestone in Iraq's effort to establish a 'normal' democratic government:

First, Iraqi lawmakers deployed a technique familiar to anyone who lives in a developed democracy: logrolling, the essence of political compromise. Iraqis bundled together three laws that each constituency—Shia, Sunnis, and Kurds—prioritized differently. By treating the three issues as one legislative package, each group could make trade-offs to get what it wanted most...

For Iraq, this was a radical departure from the issue-by-issue approach that failed so spectacularly in 2007. Last year, Iraqis failed to achieve consensus over such critical, contentious matters as the hydrocarbon legislation, the constitutional review, and resolution of the disputed territories. Like the laws passed on February 13, these issues are connected in a way that could lead to a larger compromise. For example, Iraqi Arabs might find the Kurds’ annexation of Kirkuk more palatable if the Kurds agree to let the central government manage natural resources and give it more leeway to coordinate national legislation. In this way, the February 13 compromise could serve as a road map for resolving other deadlocked disputes and moving forward on national reconciliation.

Read the whole thing.

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