The United States is trying to resolve the growing crisis over the formation of a new Iraqi government, with a deal between current Prime Minister Nouri Maliki and his main rival Iyad Allawi under which each man would hold the post of Prime Minister for two years at the head of a coalition government.
Fearful of growing political turmoil that would make it difficult or embarrassing to withdraw its remaining combat troops by August this year, as President Barack Obama has pledged, Washington has arranged talks about a joint government.
The proposal is for Maliki and Allawi to split the four-year prime ministerial term, according to Dr Mahmoud Othman, who is a veteran member of the Baghdad Parliament.
A threat by the anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr to send his much-feared Mehdi army militia back on to the streets in the wake of bomb attacks has only served to underline the growing crisis in Iraq since the inconclusive general election last month.
Sadr said he would only reactivate his Shiite militiamen under government control "to be formal brigades in the Iraqi Army or police to protect shrines, mosques, markets, houses and cities".
But the return of the Mehdi army would weaken the government and terrify Sunni Arabs in Iraq because of the role it played in the sectarian slaughter of 2006-7.
The bombings last week were the most deadly since the election, killing 72 people and aimed exclusively at Shiite civilians.
The apparently co-ordinated attack, which occurred over a two-hour timespan and included at least 10 bombs and roadside devices, was in revenge for the assassination of the two top Iraqi al Qaeda leaders in an air strike.
Iraq is looking increasingly unstable because of the efforts of Maliki to cling to power despite doing poorly in the March 7 poll, in which he came second to Allawi. Allawi's political bloc won 91 seats in the 325-seat Parliament compared to 89 for Maliki's coalition.
Alleging fraud, Maliki has secured a recount of the vote in Baghdad and is believed to be hoping to secure an extra four seats. This would make his political group the largest in Parliament and give him the right, as front runner, to try to form a new government.
But one Iraqi political leader, who did not want to be named, said that fraud was more likely in a recount by hand than it was in the original poll.
Furthermore, the recount in Baghdad is sparking demands for recounts in the rest of the country which are likely to be divisive and further delay the formation of a new government.
The main obstacle to Maliki and Allawi forming a government together is that Iraqi politics remains divided along sectarian and communal lines between Sunni and Shiite Arabs and the Kurds.
Allawi himself is Shiite but his al-Iraqiya bloc is almost entirely Sunni from western and northern Iraq. Maliki depends on the Shiite community which is unlikely to agree to share power with a group whom it sees as made up of Sunni Baathists who oppressed the Shiites for so long.
The most obvious partner for Maliki's State of Law party is the Iraqi National Alliance, which won 70 seats in the election and is made up of Shiite religious parties. The problem here is that the Sadrists, the largest party in the INA, are adamant that Maliki step down as Prime Minister.
The US is meant to withdraw all its remaining military forces by the end of 2011 under the terms of a Status of Forces Agreement signed by President George W. Bush before he left office.
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