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U.S. envoy sees Iran fueling turmoil in Iraq |
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Friday, 24 March 2006 |
Neighbor nation's actions belie its words, he says
Jonathan Finer, Ellen Knickmeyer, Washington Post
Baghdad -- Iran is publicly professing its support for Iraq's stalemated political process while its military and intelligence services back outlawed militias and insurgent groups, U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said Thursday.
Iranian agents train and arm Shiite militias such as the Mahdi Army,
linked to one of Iraq's most powerful clerics, Khalilzad said, and also
work closely with Sunni Arab-led insurgent forces including Ansar
al-Sunna, which is blamed for dozens of deadly attacks on Iraqi and
U.S. soldiers and Shiite civilians.
"Our judgment is that training and supplying, direct or indirect, takes
place, and that there is also provision of financial resources to
people, to militias, and that there is presence of people associated
with Revolutionary Guard and with MOIS," the Afghan-born Khalilzad
said, referring to Iran's main military force and its Ministry of
Intelligence and Security.
Khalilzad's comments, made in an interview in his spacious office in
Baghdad's fortified Green Zone, came as the United States and Iran --
two feuding foreign powers with dominant roles in Iraqi affairs -- have
expressed willingness to hold talks aimed at stabilizing the
beleaguered country. Iran, which borders Iraq to the east, has a
theocratic government that retains close ties with Iraq's Shiite
political leaders, but it has repeatedly denied American accusations
that it is a force for instability in Iraq. Instead, it has blamed the
United States for the unrest.
The calls by Iran for dialogue over Iraq coincided with deliberations
by the U.N. Security Council, of which the United States is a permanent
member, over possible actions against Iran for its controversial
nuclear program. Asked if any discussions had begun, Khalilzad said
that "there is nothing new on that."
Khalilzad's remarks also coincided with stalled negotiations over the
formation of Iraq's next government. Sunni Arab parties, pushing for
more prominent ministerial posts from the Shiite religious parties that
hold the largest share of the seats in the new parliament, have accused
Iran of complicity in a recent wave of attacks against Sunnis by Shiite
militias that have pushed the country toward civil war.
The parliament met for the first time last week, three months after the
Dec. 15 legislative elections, but adjourned after only 40 minutes.
"The militias haven't been focused on decisively yet. ... That will be
tough," Khalilzad said. "More Iraqis in Baghdad are dying, if you look
at the recent period of two, three weeks, from the militia attacks than
from the terrorist car bombings."
Khalilzad expressed particular concern over Iran's ties to the Mahdi
Army, an armed group loyal to the outspoken Shiite cleric Muqtada
al-Sadr, which the ambassador said is responsible for many of the
recent killings, despite al-Sadr's public pleas for calm.
Al-Sadr, who was charged by the former U.S. occupation authority with
involvement in the killing of a rival religious leader soon after the
U.S.-led invasion three years ago, has recently plunged into politics
after waging two armed uprisings against American forces in 2004.
But Khalilzad said the United States has had no face-to-face contact
with the 33-year-old cleric, whose followers hold more than 30 seats in
the new parliament. "No, I don't talk to him, because we don't meet
with Muqtada Sadr, but I have sent him messages publicly. ... We engage
him whatever way we can," said Khalilzad, who added that he and other
embassy officials did meet with Sadr's political allies. "I think that
our people advise me against it because there is an indictment against
him."
With negotiations to form a government deadlocked and Iraqis growing
increasingly impatient, Khalilzad said he is stressing to Iraqi leaders
that new authority is needed to quell instability.
"I am the one who's saying, 'The country is bleeding, you need to
move,' " he said, adding that recent sessions with political leaders
from various sides have brought at least one encouraging sign: The
groups are now more willing to directly address each other's concerns
without using Americans as intermediaries.
Still, he said, a deep gulf remains between the country's Shiite and Sunni factions.
"Sunnis are concerned about having a say in the decision-making, while
the Shia concern is that having a say in the decision-making should not
obviate the results of the elections and should not create a situation
in which decisions are so difficult to make that nothing happens
because everyone needs to speak to everyone before anything is done,"
he said.
Sunnis and others have called on Shiites to reconsider their choice --
backed by al-Sadr -- of the transitional prime minister, Ibrahim
al-Jaafari, to lead the new government. They also want the Shiites to
ensure that the country's security ministries are not put in the hands
of politicians tied to militias. The Shiite bloc has so far resisted
both demands.
Asked if Shiites, who fell short of winning a parliamentary majority,
would ever be willing to share enough power to allow a unified
government to be formed, Khalilzad pointed to constitutional provisions
that require a two-thirds vote for many of the functions of government
to be carried out.
The Shiites "have no alternative" but to compromise, he said.
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