BAGHDAD,
May 21 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - After a U.S.-backed raid
by Iraqi police on his office and home, Iraqi Governing Council member
Ahmed Chalabi, once a favorite of the Pentagon to lead the post-war
Iraq, called on the U.S.-led occupation to leave Iraq.
"My
message to the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) is let my people
go, let my people be free. We are grateful to President Bush for
liberating Iraq but it is time for the Iraqi people to run their
affairs," Chalabi said, in a press conference in Baghdad Thursday,
May 20, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Commenting
on the change of heart, American newspapers said Friday, May 21, that
the fray comes as another failure for the U.S. forces, which had
depended on Chalabi to get support among the Iraqis and on his
intelligence to claim that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction.
Chalabi
said Iraqi police and .U.S. officials raided the head office of his
Iraqi National Congress (INC) and the adjacent house where he lives with
interim Defense Minister Ali al-Alawi, Thursday morning.
The
police removed documents, his personal files, computers and personal
belongings, and nearly sparked a gun battle with his security guards.
A
bedroom Chalabi had in the office had been turned upside down, cupboards
emptied and framed portraits of the INC leader smashed.
For
Chalabi, he said after the raid the U.S.-led forces should leave Iraq
and the Iraqis should now be liberated after a more than one-year
occupation.
"I
am America's best friend in Iraq; if the CPA finds it necessary to
direct an armed attack against my home you can see the state of
relations between the CPA and the Iraqi people," Chalabi told the
press conference.
He
said the raids had been politically motivated and called on U.S.
President George W. Bush to hand over sovereignty to the Iraqi people
without delay.
The
secular Shiite, who has amassed a banking fortune and was sentenced to
jail by Jordan in absentia for fraud, said Federal Bureau of
Investigation and Central Intelligence Agency officers participated in
the two raids on his home and party offices.
But
occupation spokesman Dan Senor said the raids had been
"Iraqi-led" and that "Chalabi has worked closely with us
over a number of months" to rebuild the country.
Another
occupation spokesman denied that U.S. troops had raided Chalabi's
complex, saying that "coalition forces merely provided a support
role," according to AFP.
‘Safe
Haven’
Chalabi
said he had been targeted because the U.S. occupation forces disapproved
his skepticism over the role of U.N. special envoy Lakhdar Brahimi in
forming an interim government, and his private investigation into
allegations of corruption in the U.N. oil-for-food program.
He
accused the Baghdad chief of police, who was responsible for the raids,
as being a member of the former ruling Baath party who should have been
fired under a U.S.-led "debaathification" policy last year.
Chalabi
called for U.S.-appointed advisors to be replaced with those chosen by
Iraqis after June 30 and urged the U.S.-led occupation to relinquish
symbols of national power, like the Presidential palace used as
occupation headquarters.
Chalabi
also said Shiite leader Moqtada Sadr, who has waged a against occupation
troops for more than a month, has the right to receive money from
Muslims.
The
prominent Shiite banker and politician has recently found disapproval in
Washington over claims the INC fed false information to the U.S.
government and media before the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
U.S.
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said Wednesday the Pentagon had
halted its monthly payments of 340,000 dollars to Chalabi's party and
would seek other intelligence sources on Iraq, according to AFP.
Embarrassing
The
tension with Chalabi came as another disappointment for the U.S.
occupation forces to win the "minds and hearts" of the Iraqis,
according to U.S. papers Friday, May 21.
A
year ago, as U.S. troops swept toward Baghdad, Ahmed Chalabi and about
400 hastily assembled fighters were secretly airlifted into southern
Iraq to rally other Iraqis and begin a march toward Baghdad to help in
the invasion of the oil-rich country, reported the Washington Post.
"When
he arrived in Baghdad,…Chalabi almost immediately began rubbing U.S.
officials the wrong way by asserting himself - and becoming a rival
authority, " U.S. officials told the Washington Post Friday.
The
U.S. failure to find weapons of mass destruction during the summer and
fall further undermined his credibility, as the INC intelligence and
defectors played a major role in building the case against Saddam, U.S.
officials added.
"Now
it's demonstrable that he told the U.S. government a lot of things that
were not true," Pat Lang, former head of Middle East intelligence
at the Defense Intelligence Agency, told the Post.
At
the United Nations last year, Secretary of State Colin Powell presented
the U.S. case for war, which included information on mobile labs for the
production of chemical or biological weapons based on data from a
defector provided by the INC, data that the United States has since
conceded were untrue.
But
Chalabi's close relationship with Iran, the only neighboring state that
regularly deals with him, is now a further cause of concern in
Washington, according to the Post.
The
INC chief has always been a master at balancing the two foes, but U.S.
officials have recently cited fears that Chalabi's ties could endanger
U.S. operations in Iraq, the Post said.
"He
won the confidence of the neo-conservatives, plugged into their
wavelength and articulated a vision that was identical to the one they
had. What he said about Baathism, weapons of mass destruction,
terrorism, Saddam and the future of the Middle East was
indistinguishable from what they believed," a senior U.S. official
told the daily.