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They're both making a point and showing that they don't want to stand up to the resistance. Or are afraid (which would have been the way to increase turnout--get out the word that the Sunni Arab men that didn't vote were cowards; or it would have gotten the person saying that killed. Dunno which).
After all, the way it's set up now: either the Sunni Arab resistance manages a coup and imposes Sunni Arab dominance again ("as Allah intended", no doubt, Sunnis outrank apostate Shi'a and Arabs outrank Kurds); or they get invited in, as guests of honor, their importance recognized by all.
Had the Sunni Arabs placed second, or even third, in the ethnic lottery that the Iraqi elections are turning into, they'd be shamed.
After all, I think that Sunni Arabs sort of believed that everybody had it good, or as they deserved; and that the current system, especially the possibility that the Shi'a could be a majority, is just counter to the natural order of things.
I also don't think that there'll be Kurdish or Shi'a triumphalist views that last more than a week or two. Not long enough to affect the constitution writing, anyway. And for the Kurds to demand a shot at one of the top two offices--why not? It'll require the Shi'a and Kurds to be big enough not to lord it over the Sunni Arabs.
This is just to argue that the elections don't increase the chances of civil war. I'm not sure they decrease them, however.
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