Iraq supports Iran on nuclear development

0 views
Skip to first unread message

dubli...@gmail.com

unread,
May 27, 2006, 9:43:14 AM5/27/06
to miscrandometc
Iraq supports Iran on nuclear development

By Liz Sly
Tribune foreign correspondent
May 26, 2006, 6:43 PM CDT

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/newsroom/chi-060526iraq-sly,1,4123300.story?coll=chi-news-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true

BAGHDAD -- Iraq assured Iran on Friday that it supports Iran's right
to develop nuclear energy and will not allow Iraqi territory to be used
to threaten Iran, adopting a position at odds with America's view that
Iran should abandon its nuclear program.

Speaking during a visit by the Iranian foreign minister to Iraq to
congratulate the new Iraqi government formed a week ago, Iraqi Foreign
Minister Hoshyar Zebari said Iraq's new government "is a friendly
government to Iran."

"Iraq definitely will not be a place to threaten Iran from," Zebari
said at a news conference in Baghdad, with the Iranian foreign
minister, Manouchehr Mottaki, standing at his side.

Mottaki was the second foreign dignitary to call on Iraq's week-old
government after Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair, who visited
Monday. Mottaki's trip came as a reminder that although the
Shiite-dominated Iraqi government remains beholden to the U.S.-led
coalition for its existence, it also enjoys warm relations with its
neighbor, Shiite Iran, and does not wish to become embroiled in the
rising tensions between the U.S. and Iran.

Mottaki's visit took him to the epicenter of American power in Iraq,
the heavily fortified Green Zone, which is guarded by the U.S.
military. Most Iraqi ministries are based there, along with the U.S.
Embassy, which is housed in Saddam Hussein's former Republican Palace.

Speaking less than a mile from the embassy at the Convention Center,
where Iraq's new government was sworn in last week in the presence of
U.S. officials, Mottaki warned that Iran would retaliate against any
Arab country that facilitated a U.S. attack against Iran.

"In the event that America did do this, from any place, there would be
a strong hit from Iran at that place exactly," he said, a further
warning to the United States not to use the 133,000 troops currently
based in Iraq to wage war on Iran.

He said he thought it doubtful the U.S. would attack Iran because
America "was the one that was defeated" the last time it went to war.
But, he added, "because sometimes wise people are not the ones in
charge of taking decisions in America ... we are prepared for any
eventuality."

The comments underscored Iran's confidence in its relationship with the
new Iraqi government, which groups representatives from all the major
factions in Iraq but which is dominated by a coalition of Shiite
religious parties who have close ties to Iran.

Iraq and Iran fought a bitter war in the 1980s, but relations have
warmed significantly over the past year, since the United Iraqi
Alliance took control of Iraq's government. The Alliance groups a
number of religious parties whose leaders sought exile in Iran because
of their opposition to Saddam Hussein's regime.

President Bush has refused to rule out the use of military force
against Iran should negotiations fail to quell concerns that Iran's
nuclear enrichment program is being used to develop a nuclear bomb.

Mottaki also confirmed that Iran had suspended its agreement to engage
in bilateral talks with the U.S. over the future of Iraq.

"Unfortunately, the American side tried to use this decision as
propaganda and they raised some other issues, they tried to create a
negative atmosphere," he said.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the U.S.
still hopes the talks will go ahead.

"As far as we're concerned it's a channel that remains viable and open
should we both need it," he said.

The U.S. proposed the talks late last year amid growing concerns about
Iranian interference in Iraq, where the rising power of Shiite militias
has contributed to increasing violence.

When asked about allegations that Iran is supporting some of the
militias, Zebari said he had raised "all the concerns" in his
discussions with Mottaki.

Though Iraq supports Iran's right to develop "peaceful" nuclear energy,
it does not want Iran to develop nuclear weapons, Zebari said.

"Iraq respects Iran's desire to have nuclear power, but we don't want
any of our neighbors or friends to have weapons of mass destruction,"
he said.

Copyright © 2006, Chicago Tribune

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages