The Department of Crisis Study at the Center for Strategic and International Studies held a workshop on (The political stability as a phase of nation-building) where the lecturers tried at first to define the term of political stability where a state may going through a political vacuum or into chaos that does not stop and may strike all its joints. They also addressed the consensuses and political understandings with regard to the arrangement of post-election projects and visions in order to form a new government, which are still the best options available to avoid slipping into chaos, and provide the appropriate foundations to end the foreign presence in the country instead of perpetuating it in the shadow of instability.
The workshop also discussed the early parliamentary elections in Iraq, which produced results, data and figures that would tip the scales and establish new equations, where the dominance of traditional forces is absent or weakened from the three main components, and, despite the package of actions taken to give them greater integrity, transparency and credibility, they face campaigns of suspicion and betrayal, but their action was a real challenge and a necessary option, even if interests intersected, calculations varied, and conflicts between the parties intensified within the boundaries of a specific component (group) or within the nation as a whole.


