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Ahmadinejad says Iraq visit opens new chapter
Middle East Desk Report
BAGHDAD—Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hailed a new chapter in
ties with Iraq on Sunday, saying he was “truly happy” to make a landmark
trip to Baghdad now that Iran’s arch-foe Saddam Hussein had been
deposed.
Ahmadinejad is the first Iranian president to go to Iraq since Saddam
launched a ruinous eight-year war on Iran in 1980 in which a million
people died. He is also the first leader from the region to visit since
the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
His trip to a country where its long-time enemy the United States has
more than 150,000 troops is therefore as much about symbolism as about
cementing economic and cultural ties between the neighbors, both run by
Shi’ite majorities.
Ahmadinejad rejected long-standing U.S. accusations, repeated by
President George W. Bush on Saturday, that Iran is arming Shi’ite
militias in Iraq who kill American soldiers.
“We tell Mr. Bush that accusing others without evidence will increase
the problems in the region and will not solve them,” Ahmadinejad said in
translated remarks at a news conference with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki. “The Iraqi people do not like America,” he said.
Ahmadinejad said at an earlier news conference with Iraqi President
Jalal Talabani that his visit would open a new chapter in relations with
Iraq and help regional cooperation. “A visit to Iraq without the
dictator is a truly happy one,” he said, referring to Saddam, who was
executed by the Iraqi government in December 2006.
Ironically, his trip was only made possible by the U.S.-led invasion.
Ahmadinejad has repeatedly called for U.S. forces to leave Iraq, blaming
them for sectarian violence that has killed tens of thousands of Iraqis
since 2003. Analysts say Iran seeks a stable Iraq but at the same time
wants to make life difficult for occupying American forces.
“A developed, powerful and united Iraq is to the advantage of everyone,”
said Ahmadinejad, the first Iranian president to visit since Iran’s 1979
Islamic Revolution. Many of Iraq’s Shi’ite leaders were in exile in Iran
during Saddam’s long rule and analysts say Ahmadinejad will use his
visit to show Washington that Tehran is an influential player in Iraq
that cannot be ignored.
The Iranian president has sought to counter U.S. efforts to isolate
Tehran internationally over its nuclear program by trying to improve
ties with Arab states in the region.
His visit comes a day before an expected U.N. Security Council vote on a
third round of sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program, which
Iran says is for peaceful purposes but the United States says is for
nuclear arms.
U.S. officials in Baghdad have said they will play no role in
Ahmadinejad’s visit and that the U.S. military will not be involved in
protecting him unless they are asked for help.
Ahmadinejad’s motorcade drove from Baghdad’s airport to Talabani’s
presidential palace. Visiting foreign dignitaries normally fly by
helicopter to avoid the dangerous airport road.
And unlike the strict secrecy that surrounds Bush’s unannounced visits
to reduce the risk of an attack, Ahmadinejad’s trip has been
well-publicized. Also, unlike Bush, he will be spending the night.
Ahmadinejad received a red carpet welcome at the presidential palace,
with a military band greeting him. He met Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi
as well as Maliki and Talabani. A noticeable absence from the welcoming
party was Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, a member of Iraq’s minority
Sunni Arab community that was dominant under Saddam.
Scattered protests were held in Baghdad and towns with sizeable Sunni
Arab populations against Ahmadinejad’s visit, witnesses said. Talabani
said Iraq would seek to oust Iranian rebels based in Iraq, a long-time
Iranian demand that was expected to be raised during Ahmadinejad’s
two-day state visit.
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