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Iran
President to show off influence on Iraq
TEHRAN—Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad makes a landmark trip to
Iraq on Sunday seeking to show that Iran is an influential player in
Iraqi politics which the United States can ill afford to isolate or
ignore.
The first visit by an Iranian president since the 1979 Islamic
revolution aims to boost business and other ties with a country with
which Iran fought an eight-year war in the 1980s.
But the significance of the two-day trip, say analysts and diplomats, is
that it is happening at all when Washington accuses Tehran of supplying
weapons to militias that are killing U.S. troops. Tehran denies such
charges.
“The main issue will be the foreign policy success of going to Iraq and
coming back ... under the eyes of the Americans, when the Americans are
talking about isolating Iran,” said one Western diplomat in Tehran. Some
analysts say Iran may have used its influence with militias to help
reduce bloodshed late last year as a concession to Washington when
Tehran was worried about a U.S. threat to resort to force to deal with
the nuclear row.
At home, the Iranian president may welcome a foreign policy success to
distract attention from the economy and double-digit inflation before a
March parliamentary election that will test his popularity and indicate
his chance for re-election in 2009. Iranian officials have given little
advance information about the visit.
Iraqi officials have urged Washington and Tehran, which have not had
diplomatic ties for almost three decades, not to use Iraq as a proxy
battleground to fight out their differences, which include a row over
Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
The United States is pushing for a third round of U.N. sanctions on Iran
for refusing to halt nuclear work Washington says is aimed at making
atomic bombs. Tehran denies this.
“The influence of Iran in Iraq is very clear,” said Iranian commentator
Amir Mohebian. “If the United States wants to use Iran’s influence in
Iraq to keep security, it is better to have good relations ... not
sending the message of sanctions.”
In a bid to help quell violence, Iran and the United States have held
three rounds of rare face-to-face talks. But Iran put off a fourth round
because of unspecified technical issues.
Ahmadinejad, a vehement U.S. critic, will want to highlight to
Washington Iran’s close ties with the Iraqi government, led by Shi’ite
Muslims, Iran’s dominant religion.
Although Iran wants an Iraqi government with Shi’ites in charge, it is
keen to have good ties with all factions. It does not want Iraq to break
up, encouraging any separatists at home and leaving Iraqi Shi’ites
running a small territory, analysts say.
“The best situation (for Iran) is a central government which is Shi’ite
dominated but weak enough so it has to lean on Iran to maintain the
power balance inside Iraq,” the diplomat said.
Many Iraqi politicians, mainly Shi’ite and Kurdish, spent years in exile
in Iran when Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein was in power. The United States
accuses Iran and its Revolutionary Guards of funding, training and
equipping Iraqi militias.
Iran denies a role in the violence, which it blames on the presence of
U.S. troops, and says it wants a stable neighbor. But analysts say it,
nevertheless, sees Iraq as a useful lever.
“They don’t want (Iraq) to get out of control nor do they want it to be
too comfortable for the (U.S.-led) coalition,” said Baqer Moin, a
London-based Iranian analyst.
Some analysts say Iran may have used its influence with militias to help
reduce bloodshed late last year as a concession to Washington when
Tehran was worried about a U.S. threat to resort to force to deal with
the nuclear row.
Iran and Iraq have already begun talks on trade, energy cooperation and
a long-running border row. The rapprochement was made possible by the
U.S. toppling of Saddam Hussein, who launched the 1980-88 war in part
because of the border dispute. —Agencies
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