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The US holds talks with Iran in Baghdad
By Peter Symonds
31 May 2007
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US-Iranian talksthe first in nearly three decadestook
place in Baghdad on Monday. American ambassador to Iraq, Ryan
Crocker, met with his Iranian counterpart Hassan Kazemi Qumi in
the offices of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in Baghdad
for four hours.
At Washingtons insistence, the meeting was narrowly confined
to the catastrophic situation confronting the US-led occupation
of Iraq. Bush officials have repeatedly accused Tehran of meddling
in Iraq and providing training and arms to anti-occupation insurgents.
The Pentagon has made unsubstantiated claims that the Iranian
regime is supplying armour-penetrating explosive devices that
have been used against US troops.
For its part, Iran has been critical of the US occupation,
calling for a timetable for the withdrawal of foreign troops.
However, the willingness of the bourgeois regime in Tehran to
enter into discussions with Washington over the stabilisation
of the neo-colonial US occupation of Iraq demonstrates that its
concerns lie with furthering the interests of the Iranian capitalist
elite, not with ending the disaster confronting the Iraqi masses.
The meeting took place in an atmosphere of sharp tension. Last
December the Bush administration rejected the findings of the
high-level bipartisan Iraq Study Group, which recommended a diplomatic
initiative, including talks with Iran and Syria, to salvage the
US position in Iraq. Instead Bush pressed ahead with UN sanctions
against Iran over its nuclear programs, provocatively detained
a number of Iranian officials in Iraq and stationed a second US
aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf.
In the immediate lead-up to the talks, the Bush administration
called for the UN Security Council to adopt a third resolution
imposing even tougher measures against Iran for failing to shut
down its uranium enrichment facilities. To underscore the military
threat, the Pentagon last week began a major naval exercise involving
nine warships in the Persian Gulf. All these issues were strictly
off the agenda at the Baghdad meeting.
Not surprisingly, four hours of discussion between Crocker
and Kazemi produced very little. No agreements were announced,
no joint statement was issued and the two men pointedly held separate
press conferences following the talks. Crocker rather apologetically
told the press: As you surely know among diplomats, you
dont need a lot of substance to take up a lot of time.
While both ambassadors described the discussion as positive,
an Iraqi proposal for a second round of talks remains up in the
air.
The obvious question arises: why hold the meeting at all?
On the part of Iran, sections of the regime are clearly looking
for a deal with the US to end a confrontation that is damaging
economically, as well as generating sharp social and political
tensions inside the country, and threatening a destructive military
conflict. Even among so-called Iranian hardliners or conservatives,
President Mahoud Ahmadinejad has been criticised for playing into
the hands of the Bush administration with his anti-US and anti-Israeli
posturing and his nationalist demagogy over the nuclear issue.
Under Irans constitution, it is the countrys supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, not the president, who has ultimate
say over foreign and military policy. In recent months, Ali Larijani,
the countrys top nuclear negotiator and Supreme National
Security Council secretary, appears to be playing a more prominent
political role. He is due to meet today with European Union foreign
policy chief Javier Solana over the nuclear issue.
For all its anti-US bluster, the Iranian regime is organically
incapable of waging a genuine struggle against imperialism. In
2001 and again in 2003, it quietly reassured US officials that
it would cooperate in the US-led invasions of Afghanistan and
Iraq. In May 2003, Tehran proposed talks on all outstanding issues,
including Tehrans support for the Hezbollah in Lebanon and
its non-recognition of Israelan offer that the US ignored.
If Washington were to offer significant concessions, there is
no doubt that Tehran would willingly assist in the Bush administrations
criminal enterprise in Iraq.
Speaking after Mondays meeting, Iranian ambassador Kazemi
rebutted US allegations of meddling and was critical
of the American invaders. However, behind the rather
mild rhetoric, Tehran had clearly made a serious offer of help.
Kazemi told the media that Iran was willing to train and equip
the Iraqi security forces to create a new military and security
structure and to build Iraqs devastated infrastructure.
He also indicated that Iran was prepared to establish a trilateral
commission with US and Iraqi officials to regularly address security
issues.
The fact that a US official was speaking to his Iranian counterpart
at all marks something of a tactical shift by the Bush administration.
In rejecting the Iraqi Study Group report last December, Bush
rejected its recommendation for unconditional talks with Syria
and Iran, insisting that Tehran had to suspend its uranium enrichment
and Damascus had to implement US demands on Lebanon, Iraq and
the Palestinian authority. Yet, as well as the Baghdad meeting,
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke to her Syrian counterpart
at an international conference on Iraq in early May in Egypt.
Despite their strictly circumscribed character, these talks
reflect the profound political crisis confronting the Bush administration.
Its military surge in Iraq shows no sign of achieving
its aim of consolidating the US occupation, and US casualties
have reached new peaks. The overwhelming majority of the American
population is deeply hostile to the war in Iraq and the opposition
threatens to take more political explosive forms following the
craven capitulation of the Democrats to Bushs demands for
war funding. As a result, the White House is under fire from sections
of the political establishment who regard the war in Iraq as a
disaster for US interests and a new military adventure against
Iran as absurdly reckless.
The US decision to take part in Mondays meeting no doubt
involves a strong element of political manoeuvring to blunt the
criticism at home. But the depth of the crisis has also opened
up tactical divisions within the Bush administration. Secretary
of State Rice is cautiously promoting diplomatic initiatives,
while the most militarist elements, gathered around Vice President
Dick Cheney, champion a more aggressive stand, not only in Iraq,
but against Iran. However, the US invasion of Iraq has had a deeply
destabilising effect throughout the entire Middle East, opening
up a myriad of political and strategic contradictions for which
neither faction in the White House has any answers.
The statements by US ambassador Crocker following Mondays
meeting reflected the debate at home. On the one hand, he bluntly
insisted that the US had laid out before the Iranians a
number of our direct, specific concerns about their behaviour
in Iraq and declared these activities needed to cease.
He carefully avoided any commitment to a second meeting, saying
the US was going to wait and see whether the Iranians
changed their behaviour in Iraq. At the same time,
Crocker did not slam the door shut. He stressed that meeting had
been business-like and indicated that he would refer
Irans proposal for a trilateral commission to Washington
for further discussion.
An editorial in Tuesdays Wall Street Journal made
clear that the proponents of regime change and war
against Iran have no intention of remaining silent. The newspaper
was openly contemptuous of Rices diplomatic efforts, proposals
for a new UN resolution on Irans nuclear programs and Mondays
meeting in Baghdad. After calling for Americas economic
rivals, France and Germany, to halt their export subsidies for
Iran, it suggested: Targetted financial penalties against
key regime figures... should also be considered, along with financial
support for labour unions and dissident groups. The three [sic]
US aircraft carriers that recently shipped through the Straits
of Hormuz in broad daylight are also a reminder to Tehran of our
ability to use force against the nuclear threat if all else fails.
The US military exercise is also a reminder that having deliberately
sharpened tensions in the Persian Gulf, the Bush administration
has set the stage for a confrontation, which has the potential
to rapidly escalate out of control, regardless of initial intentions.
See Also:
US steps up threats against Iran over
nuclear programs
[26 May 2007]
Bush authorises covert CIA operations
to destabilise Iran
[25 May 2007]
Targetting Tehran: the case
of the missing Iranian general
[14 March 2007]
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