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Iraqi National
Congress In the days following
the defeat of Iraq in 1991, a wave of opposition to Saddam Hussein's regime staged
uprisings in northern and southern Iraq. A number of Iraqi coalitions formed alliances
and so began a series of meetings in the Middle East and Europe to establish a
plan of action to remove Saddam Hussein from office.
The
Iraqi National Congress [INC] was formed when the two main Kurdish separatist
militias the Kurdistan Democratic Party [KDP] headed by Masud
Barzani and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan [PUK] headed by Jalal Talabani
participated in a June 1992 meeting in Vienna of nearly 200 delegates
from dozens of opposition groups.
At the
June meeting, a National Assembly of 87 members was elected. It expanded to 234
members at Salahuddin, Iraq in October 1992. The INC Web site calls the Salahuddin
meeting a historic event because it was "the first unified opposition meeting
on Iraqi soil since Saddam and his Baath party seized power in 1968." The
group is an ethnic and religious mix of Sunnis, Shias, Kurds and Christians and
maintains its headquarters in Salahuddin with an external base in London. INC
leader Ahmed Chalabi has been mentioned as a potential successor if Saddam is
ousted. Chalabi has said he does not want to head a provisional government but
will continue to support the U.S. campaign to oust Hussein. "If
the United States says they are going to support ... regime change in Iraq, then
the Iraqi military will not defend Saddam and will come over to our side in large
numbers," Chalabi said in early October 2002. "And I think we should
plan for this contingency." In
recent years, the INC has been plagued by a lack of funds from its international
backers including the United States and continued pressure from
Iraqi intelligence services. In August 2002, the State Department stated that
the U.S. would provide the group with $8 million in additional funding.
-- By Raven Tyler, Online NewsHour
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