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Iran still meddling in Iraq, U.S. says

Tehran disputes the allegation, made during talks, of an increase in militia activity that can be linked to its support.

The World

July 25, 2007|Alexandra Zavis, Times Staff Writer

BAGHDAD — U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker chided his Iranian counterpart at a rare and heated meeting Tuesday, saying Tehran has increasingly meddled in Iraq since the pair's first encounter this year.

But he said the United States, Iran and Iraq agreed to set up a security committee to devise ways to help curb the ongoing violence in Iraq.


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Iraqi officials heralded the move as the first concrete step to emerge from the talks, which began May 28, ending a nearly 30-year diplomatic freeze between the U.S. and Iran. But Crocker said the results that count will be the ones on the ground.

"The fact is, as we made very clear in today's talks, that over the roughly two months we have actually seen militia-related activities that can be attributed to Iranian support go up and not down," Crocker said at a news briefing after the meeting.

A spokesman for the Iranian Foreign Ministry countered that "false accusations and propaganda" would not help the negotiations.

"It is crystal clear that the main objective behind repetition of such baseless accusations against Iran is to pursue the U.S. propaganda fuss and psychological warfare against the country," Mohammed Ali Hosseini told reporters in Iran.

The meeting came on a day when a suicide bomber in a tow truck killed at least 25 people and injured scores more in Hillah, a city about 60 miles south of Baghdad. They were among at least 55 people killed or found slain in bomb blasts, mortar fire and shootings across Iraq.

The session took place amid continuing tension between Washington and Tehran over Iran's nuclear program and detainees held by both countries. Such issues, however, were not discussed: Only the question of Iraq's security was on the table.

Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari termed the daylong talks, which he chaired at Prime Minister Nouri Maliki's office in the fortified Green Zone, as "very challenging."

Crocker repeated U.S. accusations that Iran is providing weapons, training and other support to Shiite and Sunni Muslim militants fighting in Iraq, including sophisticated bombs able to penetrate heavily armored vehicles. U.S. officials also say many of the rockets aimed at the Green Zone, home to the U.S. Embassy and Iraqi government offices, come from Iran.

"I was as clear as I could be with the Iranians that this effort, this discussion, has to be measured in results, not in principles or promises, and that thus far the results on the ground are not encouraging," Crocker said.

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