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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper discusses one option for Iraq's permanent government structure that is a republic founded on the national Constitution to be adopted by the people. The writer suggests three branches of government with fewer officials in the executive branch than the temporary government has. The discussion takes into consideration the ethnic and religious demographics in the country. An independent electoral management commission is strongly recommended. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGiraqg.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
states have attempted to adopt a more democratic form of government, e.g., Central America or Columbia (LaFranchi, 2005). A situation like Columbia would be devastating for Iraq because the insurgents
never go away and civil conflicts simply continue (LaFranchi, 2005). There is an element in Iraq that even Columbia has not faced - the Jihadists (LaFranchi, 2005). The Jihadists in
Iraq are not Iraqi, they are foreign Islamic extremists who have moved to Iraq for the sole purpose of causing trouble and interfering with the efforts to create a democracy
(LaFranchi, 2005). They act separately as well as in concert with Iraqi insurgents who claim to be fighting to hasten the departure of U.S. and other allied troops but they
were responsible for assassinating members of the temporary government and they have attempted to assassinate other members. One of the groups that must be involved in establishing the
government, laws and regulations is the Sunni Baathists, who may be the most hard-core of all Iraqi insurgent groups (LaFranchi, 2005). This is a predominately Muslim state with 32-37 percent
Sunnis and between 60 and 65 percent Shia (CIA, 2005). Between 75 and 80 percent of the entire population is Arab, 15 to 20 percent are Kurdish and the remaining
5 percent are identified as Assyrian, Turkoman and other (CIA, 2005). These demographics must be considered when developing a new government. The Sunnis have historically controlled oil production and revenues
(LaFranchi, 2005). This is another critical issue to consider; they cannot simply lose all their revenues (LaFranchi, 2005). The national government needs to reach out to these people and assure
them they will continue to share in the wealth garnered from oil reserves (LaFranchi, 2005). Given the fact that the Sunnis are dominant in three provinces, it is doubtful the
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