Monday, November 26, 2007

Iran, US to discuss Iraq this week

WORLD / Middle East

Iran, US to discuss Iraq this week

(AP)
Updated: 2007-07-23 08:37

BAGHDAD - The United States and Iran have set a date for ambassador-level
talks in Baghdad on the deteriorating security situation in Iraq - the
first such meeting since late May, US and Iraqi officials said Sunday.

Mourners load the casket of one of seven family members killed in a US
airstrike as they are taken from the morgue for burial in the Shiite
enclave of Sadr City in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, July 22, 2007. [AP]

The two sides will sit down together on Tuesday, according to Iraqi
Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari and US Embassy spokesman Philip Reeker,
amid US allegations that Tehran is supporting violent Shiite militias in
the country.

Zebari told The Associated Press by telephone that the discussions would
be at the ambassadorial level and would focus on the situation in Iraq,
not US-Iran tensions.

Iraq's fragile government has been pressing for another meeting between
the two nations with the greatest influence over its future, and Iran has
repeatedly signaled its willingness to sit down. State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack said last week that Washington was also ready to
hold new talks with Iran on the security situation in Iraq.

The May 28 meeting marked a break in a 27-year diplomatic freeze between
the US and Iran and was expected to have been followed within a month by
a second encounter. But following that meeting, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice and other US officials said Iran had not scaled back
what the United States claims is a concerted effort to arm militants and
harm US troops.

Tensions also have risen over Tehran's detention of four Iranian-American
scholars and activists charged with endangering national security. The US
has demanded their release, saying the charges against them are false.

At the same time, Iran has called for the release of five Iranians
detained in Iraq, whom the United States has said are members of Iran's
elite Quds Force - accused of arming and training Iraqi militants. Iran
says the five are diplomats in Iraq with permission of the government.

As recently as Sunday, US troops detained two suspected weapons smugglers
who may be linked to the Quds force, the military said. The suspects and
a number of weapons were seized during a raid on a rural farm compound in
eastern Iraq near the Iranian border, according to a statement.

McCormack said the US wanted to use the meeting to warn Iran against
continuing its support for militants in Iraq. He offered no explanation
for Washington's apparent change of heart about meeting with Tehran.

Iraq had hoped to arrange a higher-level meeting between Rice and Iranian
Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki, but the two exchanged only stiff
pleasantries during a recent international conference on Iraq's security
in Egypt.

The US is pursuing a two-track strategy with Iran that reflects the high
stakes in any engagement with a nation President Bush accuses of funding
terrorism and building a nuclear bomb.

Washington is reaching out tentatively with the talks on Iraq, but also
keeping a check on Iran with the Navy conducting exercises in the Persian
Gulf this spring and the US pushing for new UN sanctions against Tehran
over its disputed nuclear program.

The United States broke off diplomatic ties with Iran following the 1979
storming of the US Embassy in Tehran and the holding of American hostages
for 444 days.

Any direct talks between the two nations are rare, and even fleeting
encounters at larger gatherings or diplomatic dinners are scrutinized for
clues to their future relations.

Iran denies the US allegations about its activities in neighboring Iraq,
which like Iran has a majority Shiite Muslim population.

In Baghdad, meanwhile, two powerful legislators said Sunday that
prospects were dim for passage of a US-backed oil bill before
parliament's August vacation, casting a new cloud over a pivotal
September progress report that could weigh heavily on the future of the
US presence in Iraq.

American officials have pressed Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and
parliament to pass laws the US deems essential to restoring stability in
Iraq, and the oil bill is at the top of the list.

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