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US envoy accuses Iran of training Iraqi militias |
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Tuesday, 28 February 2006 |
Reuters
The American ambassador to Iraq, taking an unusually blunt line with Iran, accused Iraq's eastern neighbour on Monday of giving training and weapons to militias operating in Iraq. " Iran has another policy as well: to work with militias, provide training and provide weapons to extremist groups, direct and indirectly," Zalmay Khalilzad told reporters after a news conference.
Tehran is playing a "negative role" in Iraq, Khalilzad said, adding
that the Iranian foreign minister's recent demand that Britain pull its
troops out of the southern Iraqi city of Basra was "uncalled-for
interference."
" Basra is Iraqi territory the last time I checked the map. I think that was uncalled-for interference by Iran," he said.
In the chaos that followed the U.S. overthrow of Saddam Hussein,
militias tied to political parties and ethnic and sectarian groups have
thrived in Iraq, stoking sectarian tension.
Some leaders of the Shi'ite Muslim majority now in power in Iraq have
close links with predominantly Shi'ite Iran, which sheltered them
during Saddam's rule and helped the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) found a formidable militia.
U.S. officials have in the past accused Iran of encouraging radicalism
among Iraqi Shi'ites and allowing dangerous weaponry to pass into Iraq
-- charges rejected by Iran's leaders.
Khalilzad said Iran was trying to divert attention from international
concern over its nuclear programme. Western powers believe Iran is
trying to produce nuclear weapons under cover of a peaceful energy
programme, though Tehran denies this.
Sunni Muslims, a minority in Iraq, accuse the Shi'ite-led government of
condoning death squads operating inside the Interior Ministry, and say
they are run by SCIRI, a partner in the largest bloc in parliament.
In his comments to reporters, Khalilzad did not name any particular militia he said Iran was training.
He warned Iraqi leaders earlier that Washington would not tolerate
sectarianism or militias in the new government and its security forces.
"The ministers of interior, defence, national intelligence, the
national security adviser have to be people who are non- sectarian,
broadly acceptable, non-militia-related that will work for all Iraqis,"
he told a news conference. |