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Cheney urges Iraqis to settle differences

On Baghdad visit, he presses officials to resolve political and security issues. Bombing in Kurdish city kills 19.

THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ: HIGH-LEVEL TALKS IN BAGHDAD; VICTIMS OF VIOLENCE

May 10, 2007|Garrett Therolf, Times Staff Writer

BAGHDAD — U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney made an unannounced visit to Iraq on Wednesday to press government leaders to reconcile their political differences. His arrival occurred on a day when violence in normally placid northern Iraq killed 19 people, injured 70 and demonstrated the uncertain security situation even in sections of the country long considered relatively safe.

Cheney's visit sparked rowdy protests in the northern Baghdad district of Kadhimiya by 1,000 supporters of militant Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada Sadr. Some held signs reading, "Kick out the leaders of evil."


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Cheney met with Prime Minister Nouri Maliki and other senior Iraqi government officials in the high-security Green Zone.

Later in the day, an explosion rattled windows in the building where Cheney continued at work. Lea Anne McBride, Cheney's spokeswoman, said the vice president's "business was not disrupted. He was not moved."

At a brief news appearance after Cheney and Maliki met, the Iraqi prime minister termed the session "positive and serious."

Cheney said his message was that Iraqi leaders must focus "not only on the security issues but also on the political issues that are pending."

"I do sense today a -- I think a greater awareness on the part of the Iraqi officials I talked to of the importance of their working together to resolve these issues in a timely fashion," the vice president said.

Iraq's parliament, however, met Wednesday without taking up any of the so-called benchmarks that the United States is counting on to unify this country's fractious religious and political groups, including an oil law designed to boost production and share profits among Iraq's different regions.

The vice president, who also met with the top U.S. commander in Iraq, Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, visited Baghdad as part of a larger trip to the Middle East. Cheney is expected to travel to the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan. The Iraq stop was not announced until Cheney had departed from Washington.

The deadly bombing Wednesday in Irbil was the largest in the northern Iraqi Kurdish region, which has largely avoided the country's civil war. The explosion targeted the Interior Ministry, which oversees Iraq's police, and could be a sign that insurgents are taking their operations into new areas after being under fire by the ongoing American troop buildup in Baghdad and in Al Anbar and Diyala provinces.

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