Dude, it's a $23,000 economy car, not a ******* ferrari. Mazda has never been a large producer of AWD systems. The 323 GTX was a good system, but that was one of the very few cars Mazda ever made AWD, and it was a long time ago. We have yet to see how reliable the MS6 system is with a lot of power, and as far as the 5 awd, it will be FWD w/ rear assist, which is far from ideal for a performance car not to mention that it is not currently being produced and there's no way of telling when it will enter production (and if/when it is, I will give you my car if they release it in a manual setup).
And to whoever said just throw in the MS6 AWD, think about that. The 6 is longer, wider, and laid out differently from the 3. Even if the tranny and transfer case sropped right into the 3, they would need to design a new driveshaft and new axles, not to mention any legal s*** they would have to go through to get permission to use it from Ford and Volvo.
Even if they went through all that s*** and added the 500 lb's of extra crap needed to make it work, it still would not compete directly with the WRX, and wouldn't even be close to the STI/Evo. It would be rated right about the same hp as the WRX, it would have a much less advanced AWD system, etc. However, as a FWD car, it's in the same bracket as the Cobalt SS, SRT-4 (current) Ion Redline, GTI, and it will still be very competitive with the WRX, it'll just have a slightly high 60' time.
This argument needs to end now. There is absoultely no reason to make the car AWD except for the very very small percentage of people who would even consider AWD neccesary in a car over fwd. With FWD, it will still be very capable in the snow, it will be lighter, it will be cheaper, it will put more power to the ground, and there's less stuff to break in a new model in a series that is plagued with problems.