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Nothing Behind US Allegations?
UNITED NATIONS - While the United States has repeatedly accused Iran of providing lethal weapons to Shiite militias, last week, U.S. officials once again failed to provide solid evidence for this charge, raising questions about the actual level of Iran's meddling in Iraq.
Last Wednesday, Alejandro Daniel Wolff, deputy permanent U.S. representative to the U.N., accused Tehran of funnelling lethal weapons into Iraq. "During the recent operations in Basra, Sadr city, and Maysan, Iraqi troops uncovered convincing evidence that Iranian lethal aid has continued to flow into Iraq," he said.
Iran called the allegations "absurd" and a "routine practice" on the part of the U.S. "Whereas Iran has proved, time and again, its good intention to help Iraq's stabilisation, development and prosperity through close cooperation with the Iraqi government in different fields -- as well as to help Iraqi people overcome their immense difficulties -- the U.S. government unwarrantedly insists on its unacceptable behaviour in scape-goating others, including Iran, for its own wrong policies in Iraq," Mehdi Danesh Yazdi, Iran's ambassador to the U.N. responded in a statement.
Those mistakes include, "the continuation of the presence of foreign forces in the country and certain wring policies and practices on the part of foreign forces there," Yazdi explained.
Meanwhile, Iraqi officials who enjoy a close relationship with their Shiite neighbour have ignored the U.S. accusations, believing that if anything can make Iraq secure, it is diplomacy and negotiation with regional governments.
Hamid Al-Bayati, permanent representative of Iraq to the U.N., who did not specifically comment on the U.S. representative's allegations, told IPS that there are "terrorists" who are coming across the borders and Iraq's neighbours could scrutinise these people and put more control on their borders -- expanding the circle of countries who are responsible for the current security situation in Iraq.
"There is a mechanism which is agreed between Iraq and these countries, on what these countries can do through the meeting of interior ministers of these countries, through the expanded neighbouring countries conferences which took place in Kuwait and anther one that is going to take place in Jordan in fall," Al-Bayati added. "We are going to continue these negotiations through diplomatic channels."
Iraq is viewed by many as a proxy for Iran-U.S. hostilities over the past four years, and Iranian officials have called the U.S. presence in Iraq the main reason for sectarian violence. Iraqis have asked both countries not to use Iraqi soil for their proxy war.
When asked whether an improvement in Iran-U.S. relations could help boost security in Iraq, Al-Bayati told IPS that Iraq facilitated three rounds of meetings between Iran and the U.S. inside Iraq and hoped that a fourth round -- which was postponed -- would take place. "We hope that any improvement in the relationship between Iran and the U.S. will help the situation in Iraq," he added.
On the Iranian side, U.S. allegations have been questioned for lack of solid evidence. "It is noteworthy that despite these groundless allegations, to date no single credible evidence has ever been presented to substantiate them," Yazdi stated in response to the recent U.S. claims of Iran's destructive role in Iraq. "To the contrary, several high ranking Iraqi officials are on record, stressing Iran's constructive role in the country and rejecting the solid allegation."
"The United States accuses Iran because the two countries have as yet not resolved their outstanding disputes," Dariush Zahedi, a research fellow at the Institute of International Studies in at University of California at Berkeley, told IPS. "The accusation is designed to stem Iran's rising regional influence, which the U.S. itself helped to enhance by overthrowing two of the Islamic republic's most implacable enemies -- the Taliban and Saddam [Hussein] regimes."
However, the U.S. claims the activities of Iran's Islamic Republican Quds force contradicts Iran's public stated policy of supporting the Iraqi government. "In addition, during these operations, numerous Jish-al-Mahdi militia fighters and leaders of Jish-al-Mahdi-associated highly trained special groups fled to Iran where they received sanctuary," said Wolff in a recent U.N. Security Council meeting.
"As far as the U.S. is concerned, the accusation has the advantage of undermining Iran's image in the eyes of Iraqi Shiites by blaming Iran for the nefarious activities of the discredited elements in the Mahdi army," explained Zahedi about the nature of U.S. claims against Iran.
"The allegations are also designed to provide credence for America's narrative that depicts Iran as a deceitful, untrustworthy and hypocritical power which, while professing to support the central government in Baghdad, trains, funds, and arms [Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri] al-Maliki's enemies," he said.
"Iran's role in Iraq is a by-product of U.S.-Iran relations," Karim Sadjadpour, an associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, told IPS. "When U.S-Iran relations have stalled, Iran's role in Iraq would likely be unconstructive and when U.S.-Iran relations are cooperative, then Iran's role in Iraq might be cooperative. It doesn't necessarily mean that the U.S. has to pull out from Iraq."
While U.S. officials accuse Iran of destabilising Iraq, some analysts say the fact that the sectarian violence in Iraq has diminished -- although not extinguished -- since the U.S. troops 'surge' is partially because of Iran's positive role in supporting al-Maliki's government, a fact that is ignored by the U.S.
"The security situation has improved, not simply because of the surge, but because of a host of other factors, including the successful completion of ethnic cleansing in key areas and America's success in buying-off former Sunni insurgents," Zahedi told IPS.
Improved "economic conditions, the improving performance of the Iraqi military, the decision on the part of Iran to lend greater support to the Iraqi central government instead of Shiite militias, as well as blunders on the part of al-Qaeda and setbacks suffered by Moqtada al-Sadr," are also key factors according to Zahedi.
Regardless of neighbouring countries' involvement, the mistrust between the Kurds and the Arabs on the one hand and the Shiites and the Sunnis on the other still runs deep in Iraq and, without the requisite political reconciliation, has the potential of unleashing strong centrifugal forces that can once again transform Iraq into a failed state.
© 2008 Inter Press Service



20 Comments so far
Show AllThis is obvious, yet nonetheless bears constant repeating: DON'T BELIEVE A GODDAMN THING UTTERED BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT OR THEIR INDENTURED SERVANTS IN THE MSM. THIS INCLUDES THE WORDS "A" "AND" AND "THE".
Did the United States ever make reparations for the CIA's overthrow of Iran's democracy?
I see that the US and Israel are sending Weapons of Many Deaths (WMDs) to destabilize poor countries all over the planet. How can this promote peace and repair the world?
With bush pounding his chest and challenging Russia over the current Georgia (good Democratic friend of US) deal - which I read somewhere that Georgia had started by going against another area over there, and it wasn't until Russia moved in to stop it that bush got involved - it occurred to me that diverting our attention to Russia, and keeping Russia's attention there too, bush and company could move on Iran while one of their biggest allies was diverted.
Or am I just being delusional - again.
Before the Iraq war, those Iraqis were said to be very clever indeed, capable of making nukes even though they allowed inspections anywhere, capable of producing chemical weapons, even though all the chemicals to make them that had previously been supplied by the U.S., Germany and others had all been destroyed years earlier..then more recently Iraqis became so technologically challenged that they were incapable of making copper bowls for I.E.D.'s without assistance from those clever Iranians. The MSM breathlessly informed us of solid, irrefutable, material evidence of Iranian involvement in the Iraq 'insurgency', promising that that evidence was forthcoming, but it never was. The MSM has never challenged those assertions or even reminded us of their own previous attempts to mislead us. Why would we expect anything different?
It seems that the US frequently acts like a spoiled child. It is ok for the CIA to support destabilizing factions in Iran but no one better do that to us or we'll stamp our feet and cry foul. If your going to play the game learn to suck it up when you get what you give.
The USA sounds a LOT like the recent lunatic utterances from Georgia's "President" McHell Sackoshit.
"Iranian forcesare entering Washington and raping and looting!...but for some reason the reporters there cant see them.
and they BOTH sound like the infamous "Comical Ali" ...the disinformation specialist from Saddam's Iraq
Maybe the Iranians are delivering the weapons to Iraq in Saddam's old invisible mobile chemical labs??
And where is the American "Left" on this? Nowhere I see. Well? Until you stop supporting BIG GOVERNMENT, nothing will ever be resolved. Besides, this neocon behavior has been going on since the end of WWII.
You don't need evidence if you have state controlled media. (CO-CONSPIRITORS)
"WARSAW, Poland (AP)- The Polish prime minister says that Poland and the United States have reached an agreement that will see a battery of American missiles established inside Poland, a plan that has infuriated Russia and raised the specter of an escalation of tension with the country.
Donald Tusk, speaking in a televised interview from the capital, said Thursday that the United States agreed to Polish proposals that it help augment its defenses in exchange for placing 10 missile defense interceptors."
This looks like Russian air defense missiles in Iran are assured now. How happy the US, UK and Israeli Merchants of Death must be.
I would agree with Mordechai. No one is speaking the truth, the ruling class, which right now cares very little for the many of our interests and which circumstance promises to continue to become more obvious and controlling as time passes, probably feel like any authoritarian figure that "they are only doing what's best for us." Perhaps, but like every authoritarian figure, I can't see that's really their judgment call. . .unless they have become god's, which is historically a flaw in human behavior.
We only see a glimmer of what's really going on as we listen to Bush, at the end of his rule supposedly, and read about events, despite that we live on this planet and these fools are supposed to inform us as to what they are doing, ideally, or that we live in an oblivion. Come to think of it that never works historically either.
And with Wilmoor, above, the deception in Georgia, is all in the timing. The more you think about what's going on, it is too close in time and place, this must be related to Iran in many ways, without even studying the news in depth. There are plans in motion about which we can do nothing at this point, just as we have been having to watch the situation in Iran distorted under all kinds of pressure. But it being too late to impeach Bush, and oil, consolidated power, all kinds, and fortunes, whatever that situation is all about, really. But the criminals are clever and intelligent in their own fashion, even as we ridicule Bush, they are playing a cunning, ruthless game. They are all in on it, and we are just observers, precisely as Rove instructed us, the fact that they told us what they were doing from the very start, the Axis of evil, and catapulting the propaganda, and fooling us once or twice, is especially provocative.
On a bright note, I have relearned that the dinosaurs metamorphosed into birds over the millenia, so who can say.
It was enjoyable reading Pravada telling Bush to shut up.
Anyone who accuses Iran of "meddling" in a country we have invaded, occupied, and turned into a showpiece for colonial exploitation and pillaging, is either braindead or terminally dishonest.
Our Israeli-occupied, neofascist MSM is obviously the latter, but even with all the US media agitprop, most Americans, according to the polls, remain critical of Yankee imperialism and exceptionalism.
claudius August 14th, 2008 4:09 pm "It was enjoyable reading Pravada telling Bush to shut up."
Were you around in the eighties? Remember the politburo and the terrible Russian spokesmen who were the worst liars in the world? Back then, even critics of the US government took US statements to be at least tangentially true.
Now, they are at least neck and neck in terms of credibility and on some issues, I would tend to lean towards the Russian version. Condi Rice is a good example, my American friends tell me she is a smart woman but, my God is she a bad liar.
Check out her indignant denial of Suskind's evidence of CIA illegality; gritting her teeth she says "The US does not forge documents!", as if it wasn't well known that that is precisely what the CIA does on a regular basis, except this time, they are caught red handed targeting Americans. Does anyone here think poor old Conyers is going to move on this or will it be forgotten in the next Britney Spears disclosure?
I don't trust this administration as far as I could throw them! I trust the Russian's far more that I do Bush and his congenital pack of Liars! I'll be so damn glad when this sack of shit is out of office!!!
In July when KARL ROVE was "out of the country" and so unable to appear before Congress, he was in Georgia talking to the ambitious little mini-imperialists there who (lo and behold) are right now fighting Russia to stand up for their freedom to steal from their weaker neighbors---and helping McCain, who (see Robert Scheer article on CD now) is himself very likely much connected with this whole new disaster over there. "Sure,go ahead" the GOP tell Georgians, knowing how Russia will respond---and so we need a "Cold Warrior" like McCain to get us through such increasingly dark times. You know, vote for the old guy---he helped create this catastrophic decade, so he must know the way out of it....
"Robert Tait in Istanbul The Guardian, Friday August 15 2008
Turkey delivered a humiliating snub to Iran's visiting president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, yesterday by backing out of a lucrative energy deal under pressure from the US government, which feared it would enhance Iranian nuclear ambitions."
As I recall it was Daddy Bush and his Secretary of War, Dick Cheney, that pressured Kuwait and Saudi Arabia to demand immediate repayment of Iraq's Iran/Iraq war debt. This led directly to the First Gulf Oil War, just ask Ambassador April Glaspie about her July 25th 1990 meeting with Saddam. Or ask Rumsfeld and Cheney about Saddam starting the Iraq/Iran war to get back for the hostages.
First, News @ whatfools says is a snub by Turkey in the Presidency of the Islamic Republic of Iran News Service.
Second, Reuters reports on Israel's kind of, lets say PISSED off that Turkiye met with Ahmadinejad.
Third, Reuters reports on Ahmadinejad, Abdullah Gul[president], Reycep Erdogan[PM] spoke about and what Erdogan and Gul, although Gul doesn't wield much authority, and the PM's conclusion. So you all decide.
____________________________________________________________________
Wednesday 13 August 2008 - 17:44
Iran president due in Turkey
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad leading a high-ranking delegation is to leave Tehran for Turkey on Thursday at the invitation of his Turkish counterpart President Abdullah Gul.
During his stay, the president is to meet President Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on issues of mutual interest and the latest regional and international developments.
Iran's peaceful nuclear program will also be on the agenda of talks with the Turkish officials.
It will be Ahmadinejad's first visit to Turkey since he took office in August 2005.
An Iranian politico-economic delegation, led by Deputy Foreign Minister Alireza Sheikh-Attar is currently in Turkey in the run-up to president Ahmadinejad's upcoming visit".
__________________________________________________________________
Israel slams Turkey over Ahmadinejad plan to visit
By Barak Ravid, Haaretz Correspondent
Tags: Israel, Iran, Turkey
Israel has officially protested against the planned visit of Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Turkey next week.
Israel's ambassador to Turkey, Gabi Levy, presented the protest to officials in Ankara, and the Turkish ambassador to Israel was summoned to Jerusalem.
"Israel is disappointed that Turkey has invited for an official visit a leader who denies publicly the Holocaust, and thus grants him legitimacy," was the message given to the Turkish ambassador to relay to his government.
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Iran's president has sought an official invitation to Turkey for four years, but every time such a visit was scheduled, it was postponed.
In recent months ties between Ankara and Tehran grew closer as Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan attempted to play mediator between the Iranian regime and the United States.
Erdogan offered the Americans indirect negotiations with Iran in Turkey, along a model similar to the Turkish mediation between Israel and Syria.
Ahmadinejad's planned visit also drew severe criticism in Turkey because of the Iranian president's criticism of the founder of modern Turkey, Kemal Ataturk. As a way of containing the furor, Ankara downgraded the visit from "official state visit" to "working visit".
_______________________________________________________________
Ahmadinejad, Turkish leaders fail to agree on proposed energy deals
By Reuters
Tags: Turkey, Ahmadinejad, Israel
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Turkish counterpart failed on Thursday to sign energy deals opposed by Washington, which is seeking to pressure Tehran into halting its nuclear program.
A joint statement from Ahmadinejad and President Abdullah Gul in Istanbul said the two Muslim countries would continue discussing further energy cooperation.
Neither side gave a reason for the delay but stern faces by Turkish and Iranian officials at the Ottoman palace where the talks took place suggested a somber mood. "I think Turkey cannot afford politically to make a deal with them now and that's why it failed," said Soner Cagaptay, Turkish Research Program director at the Washington Institute.
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A source from Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's office told Reuters earlier that Ahmadinejad's visit might not yield the expected oil and gas deals following new demands from the Iranian side, including pricing and investment conditions.
Gul and Erdogan have come under fire for inviting Ahmadinejad, who has lobbied hard since coming to power in 2005 to visit NATO member Turkey, which has strong ties with the United States and Israel.
Europe has shunned the Iranian leader, who has called for the destruction of Israel and defied international demands for a suspension of his country's nuclear enrichment program - the subject of ongoing talks between Iran and Western powers.
"As long as we defend our rights, we support the negotiation process started in Geneva. We are open to the suggestions of our friends," Ahmadinejad told a joint news conference with Gul at an Ottoman palace on the Bosphorus.
The United States has voiced its opposition to the energy deal amid a standoff between Iran and Western countries and is trying to isolate the Islamic Republic over fears it is pursuing a secret nuclear weapons program. Tehran denies this.
"The American government has been against our people for 30 years, they always find an excuse," Ahmadinejad said.
After Russia, Iran is the biggest provider of gas to Turkey.
Analysts have also questioned whether the Turkish government was serious about going through with the $3.5 billion investment project, given the possible U.S. sanctions Turkish firms could face and comes as Western firms pull out of Iran.
"Ahmadinejad's visit has symbolical meaning. With this visit Iran gives the world the message that it is not possible to isolate Iran," Arif Keskin, analyst at Ankara's Center for Eurasian Strategic Studies, told broadcaster CNN Turk.
The Turkish government has said Ahmadinejad's two-day visit was necessary given the failure to resolve Tehran's nuclear program, and offered to help resolve the dispute.
"Iran and Turkey are two important countries in this region... It is natural for them to cooperate at the highest level," Gul said, adding he had asked Iran to take into consideration the international community's concerns about Tehran's nuclear program.
Analysts also say Turkey may have played up the nuclear issue to diffuse criticism over inviting Ahmadinejad. Turkey's powerful secularist establishment has long opposed his visit on fears he would seek to export the Islamic revolution.
Turkey, which has shared a border with Iran since 1639, opposes Tehran ever acquiring nuclear weapons.
Bilateral trade is estimated to reach $10 billion this year.
Turkey fears that a possible U.S. or Israeli strike against Iran will plunge the region into turmoil and hurt Turkey.
Gul and Erdogan have sought to boost Turkey's role as a mediator in regional conflicts.
Last year Ankara and Tehran signed a memorandum of understanding to export Iranian gas to Europe through Turkey, including a provision for Turkey to produce 20.4 billion cubic meters of natural gas in Iran's huge South Pars gas field.
Related articles:
Ahmadinejad: West must quit support of dying Israeli regime
Israel slams Turkey over Ahmadinejad plan to visit
Ahmadinejad: Israel is a 'stinking corpse' doomed to disappear
Fareed Zakaria has written on some issues the US has had against Iran and, if you can get your hands on a copy of the article, I think it'd be well-worth reading.
Newsweek, October 29, 2007, page 35 - "Stalin, Mao and ... Ahmadinejad?"
He includes many intelligent viewpoints that fingers the Bush Administration's absurd charges on many levels. He reminds us that Iran has not gone outside its country to war with another nation since the late 1700s; that our government really knows so little about what's going on over there, save from sources loyal to Bush and Cheney; that it isn't financially viable for them to pour money into a nuclear race to devise, construct, and stockpile nuclear weapons.
I haven't hit upon all the points he makes in argument against the US charges but if you take the time to read-over it, I'm sure you'll come to the conclusion that our top political leaders are feeding a lot of people a lot of bullshit regarding Iran.
With the track record mainstream media and our politicians have in feeding us half-truths and outright blatant lies, I'm a lot less inclined to consider their charges against Iran and more likely to give consideration to perspectives outside the Bush Administration.
But in the interest of full disclosure it must be noted that Fareed Zakaria is a Moslem.