Iran Tuesday offered to help establish security and stability in
Iraq after Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki held talks in
Teheran on his first official visit to the Islamic Republic.
Maliki's aides said he would tell fellow Shi'ite Islamist
leaders in Iran that Teheran should not interfere in Iraqi affairs,
a message likely to please Washington, which accuses Iran of
backing militants fighting US troops in Iraq.
But Maliki and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad gave few
details about their talks Tuesday, except to say that the two
neighbours which fought a bloody war in the 1980s had agreed to
co-operate in political, economic and security fields.
"We will give our full assistance to the Iraqi Government to
establish security in (Iraq). Strengthening security in Iraq means
strengthening security and stability in the region," Ahmadinejad
told a joint news conference after their meeting.
Maliki, speaking through a Persian translator, said: "This visit
will be useful for co-operation between Iran and Iraq, in all
political, security and economic fields."
The two sides signed an agreement covering these areas.
Shortly before starting the two-day visit, Iraqi government
spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said Maliki would deliver a blunt message
that Iran should not interfere in Iraq although he stopped short of
endorsing US charges of Iranian "meddling."
"We want to pass a message to the Iranian leaders that Iraq
needs good relations with neighboring countries, without
interference in our internal affairs," Dabbagh said.
Maliki will meet Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the
highest authority in Iran, and influential former President Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani today.
While officially encouraging Iraq's new ties to Washington's
adversary, there is unease in the United States at Iranian
influence over the Shi'ite leaders brought to power in elections
that followed the US overthrow of Saddam Hussein.
(China Daily September 13, 2006)