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Ahmadinejad
says US should leave Iraq
Middle East Desk Report
BAGHDAD—Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Monday dismissed U.S.
accusations that his country is training extremists and demanded that
the Americans withdraw from Iraq. Speaking in a nearly hour-long news
conference at the end of an unprecedented visit to Iraq, Ahmadinejad
said the U.S. allegations — that Iran is training Shiite militants who
target American troops and Muslim rivals — don’t matter to the Iranians.
“Of course American officials make such remarks and such statements, and
we do not care ... because they make statements on the basis of
erroneous information,” said the hard-line Iranian leader, who smiled
through much of the session. “We cannot count on what they say.” He said
the foreign presence in Iraq was an “insult to the regional nations and
a humiliation.”
Ahmadinejad is the first Iranian president to visit Iraq, and his
two-day trip highlighted one of the unintended consequences for
Washington after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of the Iraq that ousted
Saddam Hussein from power. Under Saddam, a Sunni who once led an
eight-year war against Iran, the two countries were bitter enemies, but
Iraq’s new Shiite-dominated government has deep ties to Iran’s
cleric-led Islamic republic.
Ahmadinejad was warmly received by Iraqi President Jabal Talabani, a
Sunni Kurd, and other Iraqi leaders. He said Tehran and Baghdad are
“brotherly” nations who share many beliefs and values. “Of course,
dictators and foreigners have tried to tarnish and undermine the
emotional relations between the two states,” he said.
After meeting Sunday with Talabani, who told the Iranian leader to call
him “Uncle Jalal,” Ahmadinejad drove through the U.S.-controlled Green
Zone to visit Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a fellow Shiite, at his
Cabinet offices. The sprawling Green Zone contains the core of the U.S.
diplomatic mission to Iraq — including a massive new embassy — and is
heavily protected against occasional rocket barrages. American officials
have accused Iran of backing Shiite extremists behind such attacks.
“The presence of foreigners in the region has been to the detriment of
the nations of the region,” Ahmadinejad said. “It is nothing but a
humiliation to the regional nations. “Their only achievements are that
regional nations further dislike them, it adds to the regional nations’
hatred. No one likes them.”
Pressed by a reporter how he knows the Iraqis don’t like the U.S.,
Ahmadinejad said that the “Iraqi people have been anti-colonialist and
anti-occupation in the course of their history.” “If you go to the
streets and talk to ordinary Iraqi people, you will be able to realize
the true nature of such a claim,” he said.
Still, the Iraqis are precariously balanced between U.S. and Iran, with
government officials saying in recent weeks that they don’t want the
country torn apart in a power struggle between the two sides. About
1,000 protesters in a Sunni-dominated neighborhood in Baghdad protested
his visit Monday, a day after scattered demonstrations greeted his
arrival. “Your mortars preceded your visit,” one placard read.
Though both Iraq and Iran have Shiite majorities, they were hostile to
each other throughout Saddam’s long reign. About 1 million people died
in the fighting that ensued after Saddam invaded Iran in 1980.
But when Saddam’s Sunni-dominated regime fell to the U.S.-led invasion
and Iraq’s Shiite majority took power, long-standing ties between the
Shiites of both countries flourished. Earlier Monday, Talabani and
Ahmadinejad signed seven memorandums of understanding on issues
including industrial development, trade and customs.
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