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But of greater concern, U.S. officials fear that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki may not be able to sell it to either his own government or the Iraqi parliament. There is intense opposition to any surrender of Iraqi sovereignty among al-Maliki's Cabinet and lawmakers. On Tuesday, in Baghdad, al-Maliki presented the tentative accord to President Jalal Talabani as well as to the country's Sunni and Shiite vice presidents. They were the first in a series of sessions aimed at measuring political support for the agreement in Iraq. An official statement said al-Maliki, Talabani and the two vice
presidents -- Tarik al-Hashemi and Adil Abdul-Mahdi -- studied the draft "in depth and in detail," but it gave no indication how the participants reacted. Al-Maliki on Wednesday was to show the draft to the National Security Council, a consultative body that includes himself, Talabani, the vice presidents, leaders of political blocs and the parliament speaker. If they agree, he will submit the draft to his Cabinet for their approval by two-thirds majority. The final step will be parliament's approval. Followers of influential Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr oppose any agreement that would keep U.S. soldiers in Iraq. And Shiite-dominated Iran, which wields considerable influence among some Shiite parties, also opposes the agreement.
[Associated
Press;
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