http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050828/ap_on_go_pr_wh/bush_iraq_1<snip>
"Not everyone loves every article of this document, not everyone is totally satisfied, but there is enough in this constitution that meets the basic needs of all communities and for Iraq to move forward," the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
But reflecting the turmoil in Iraq over the document's drafting, Khalilzad was already talking about the need for changes.
"Our own constitution, as you know, had to change in order to remain relevant, and this will be the case with Iraq as well," he said. "Constitutions are not just one-time documents. To be relevant they will have to adapt."
After negotiators finished the draft Sunday, it was read to the legislature, where the Shiite-Kurdish bloc that supports it has an overwhelming majority. But lawmakers adjourned without voting on the document.
It included last-minute changes aimed at easing Sunni concerns. But the 15-member negotiating Sunni negotiating team rejected the constitution as "illegitimate," raising serious concerns about the outcome of an October referendum in which Iraqis will vote on whether to accept or reject it.

Nembers of the Shabak community, the ethnic minority in the Mosul area, rally in Burtilla, east of Mosul against the constitution draft, Sunday, Aug. 28, 2005. The Shabaks make up a substantial portion of the Nineveh plains population, residing in 35 villages as well as in Mosul. Evidence of Shabaks in the region exist from the 16th century and their religious beliefs contain mostly Sunni, Shiite, and some Christian elements. (AP Photo/Mohammed Ibrahim)