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Iran: US-Iraq security deal aims to enslave
Iraqis
By DONNA ABU-NASR
Associated Press
June 4, 2008
One of Iran's most powerful politicians vowed
Wednesday that the Islamic world will stop a long-term security
agreement that is being negotiated by the U.S. and Iraq.
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani told a gathering of Muslim
figures in the holy city of Mecca that the United States is trying
to enslave Iraqis through the deal. This comments were the strongest
and most high-level public condemnations of the potential security
deal by an Iranian official.
"The essence of this agreement is to turn
the Iraqis into slaves before the Americans, if it is sealed,"
the former president of Iran said. "This will not happen. The
Iraqi people, the Iraqi government and the Islamic nation will not
allow it."
Rafsanjani said the U.S. "occupation of Iraq
represents a danger to all nations of the region" and warned
that the security deal would create a "permanent occupation."
Rafsanjani heads two of the country's most powerful clerical governing
bodies, the Expediency Council and the Assembly of Experts.
Iran's previous criticism of the security agreement
has largely been in private talks with Iraqi officials.
The deal, which the Iraqis and Americans hope
to finish in midsummer, would establish a long-term security relationship
between Iraq and the United States, and a parallel agreement would
provide a legal basis to keep U.S. troops in Iraq after the U.N.
mandate expires at the end of the year.
Supporters believe the deal would help assure
Iraq's Arab neighbors, notably Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States,
that Iraq's Shiite-led government would not become a satellite of
Shiite-dominated Iran as American military role here fades.
But public critics in Iraq worry the deal will
lock in American military, economic and political domination of
the country. Some Iraqi politicians have attacked the deal, especially
those loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr, the anti-American cleric whose militiamen
fought U.S. and Iraqi troops in Baghdad until a May truce ended
seven weeks of fighting.
The agreement is likely to be among the issues
discussed this weekend when Iraq's Shiite prime minister, Nouri
al-Maliki, is due to visit Iran — his second trip there in
a year. Ahead of the visit, his party sought to calm worries by
insisting that the deal would not allow foreign troops to use Iraq
as a ground to invade another country — a reference to Iranian
fears of a U.S. attack.
Rafsanjani was speaking at a Saudi-sponsored conference
aimed at unifying Muslim voices before an interfaith dialogue that
Saudi King Abdullah wants to launch with Christian and Jewish religious
figures. |