Ghazi Mashal Ajil al-Yawer (
Arabic: غازي مشعل عجيل الياور) a member of the Shammar tribe (born
March 11 1958 in
Mosul, Iraq) was a
Vice President of Iraq under the
Iraqi Transitional Government of 2005-2006, and was
President of Iraq under the
Iraqi Interim Government from
2004 to
2005.
He was originally a member of the
Iraqi Governing Council created following the
US-led 2003 invasion of Iraq. As President of the Council, in
2004 he was appointed by the council to serve as interim President of Iraq following the June 28 return of Iraqi sovereignty from the
Coalition Provisional Authority.
A
Sunni Muslim and
Shamar tribal leader, al-Yawer is a
civil engineer by training. His uncle, Shaykh Muhsin al-Yawar is the current head of the Shammar tribe and his grandfather played a role in guiding Iraq towards independence in the
1920s.
He studied in the
King Fahd University for Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM) for the first 2 years, then finished his
BSc in the UK. He enrolled in an English language program at
American University in Washington, D.C. and then took his
masters at
George Washington University in the mid
1980s. While in Washington recently to meet at the White House, he met with professors and administrators at American University.
He was a good friend of
Sa'ad I. Al-Qeshtaini, an Information Security Consultant and famed IT specialist in Saudi Arabia. Ghazi spent much of the past two decades in
Saudi Arabia, where he became vice president of
Hicap Technology Co. Following the US-led overthrow of
Saddam Hussein in
2003, Ghazi sold his business and returned to Iraq.
He was scheduled to be the last holder of the rotating council presidency, with a term lasting until
June 30, 2004, the date of the expected transition to official Iraqi sovereignty. Instead, he was chosen at an earlier date to be Iraq's formal
Head of State, and occupy the largely symbolic post of "State President" of Iraq. He held this position in an interim capacity until an elected Iraqi parliament could select a new permanent president, as mandated in the
Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period. This happened on
April 6 2005 when
Jalal Talabani was elected president, and al-Yawer, after much negotiation, was made one of Iraq's two vice-presidents. He and the
Iraqi Interim Government were sworn in on
June 28, 2004, when the U.S.-led coalition handed over power two days early.
His appointment as interim President came at the advice of a UN special envoy to Iraq
Lakhdar Brahimi, who chose Ghazi in recognition of his age and stature, and the fact that he was a moderate
Sunni Muslim.
Iyad Allawi, who served as
Prime Minister during al-Yawer's presidency, is a
Shiite Muslim; the two collectively represented Iraq's largest religious groups.
L. Paul Bremer in his memoirs, however, indicated that
George W. Bush himself urged the appointment of al-Yawer, as Bush "had been favorably impressed with his open thanks to the Coalition."
http://www.slate.com/id/2161644
In the January
2005 Iraqi election he was the leader of
The Iraqis, the largest Sunni list of candidates. His list won about 150,000 votes in Iraqi National Assembly elections, 2% of the national vote. Although it's hard to find research or polling on the subject, a few Sunni commentators, such as "
Riverbend" of
Baghdad Burning, suggest that this poor showing was largely due to the fact that he is held in low esteem by common Sunni Iraqis, being called by the epithet "al Baqara al dhahika", which translates roughly as "the laughing cow".
In December he joined the
Iraqi National List coalition with other secular politicians
Iyad Allawi and
Adnan Pachachi.
His brother, Faris Mashal al-Yawir, is the Iraq ambassador to the
UAE.