http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/01/15/ap/world/mainD8MLFSMO1.shtml

 


Iraq President Makes Landmark Syria Trip 


Iraqi president visits Syria to discuss security issues, strengthening
relations


Syria's leader promised to help ease tensions in neighboring Iraq during
Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's landmark visit to Damascus on Sunday, just
days after President Bush accused Syria of backing the Iraqi insurgency.

A veteran Kurdish politician who spent years in exile living in Syria,
Talabani is the first Iraqi president to visit Damascus in nearly three
decades. His trip was seen as part of an attempt to warm relations between
the longtime rivals.

A prominent Iraqi lawmaker with close ties to Talabani said the president's
visit to Syria was not meant as a snub to Bush. The six-day trip had been
planned for nearly a year and its date was finalized about two weeks ago,
Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Othman said from Baghdad.

But he acknowledged that the timing "may seem a little tricky" after Bush's
speech and said Iraq needed to follow its own foreign policy goals
independent from Washington's agenda.

"Our interests differ from those of the United States," he said. "The enmity
between the United States and Syria and Iran doesn't benefit the situation
in Iraq."

Syria's official news agency SANA said the talks between Syrian President
Bashar Assad and Talabani focused on "bilateral relations," and that both
sides expressed a desire to strengthen ties between their countries. Assad
also stressed Syria's readiness to help Iraq achieve national reconciliation
and political stability to help end the increasing sectarian violence in the
country, the state news agency said.

The United States and Iraqi officials accuse Damascus of providing refuge to
Sunni insurgents and allowing them to cross the border freely into Iraq to
fight American and Iraqi troops. In an address Wednesday outlining his new
strategy for Iraq, Bush vowed to take military action to disrupt insurgent
supply lines coming into Iraq from Syria and Iran.

Syria denies it is providing refuge to militants, countering that the Iraqis
and their U.S. backers are not doing enough to guard their side of the
border.

Iraq and Syria restored diplomatic relations late last year, more than two
decades after they were cut over ideological disputes, Syria's support of
Iran in its 1980-88 war with Iraq, and charges that Baghdad supported Syrian
militants.

Talabani has been warmer toward Syria than Iraq's Shiite Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki, who fears that giving the country's neighbors a role in
ending the violence in Iraq would allow them to meddle in Iraqi affairs.

But Vali Nasr, a U.S.-based expert on Middle Eastern affairs and a fellow on
the Council of Foreign Relations, said Iraq needs to independently engage
its neighbors, even if it disagrees with some of them.

"The Iraqis must have their own plan for regional engagement and show that
not everything is managed in Washington," he said.

Syria is a prime candidate for engagement in any regional outreach by Iraq.

Its close relations with Iran are a vital asset given Tehran's vast
influence with Iraq's majority Shiite Muslims. It also has good relations
with the once-dominant Sunni Arabs in Iraq and plays host to 800,000 or more
Iraqi refugees, including stalwarts of Saddam's Baath Party known to be
active in the Iraqi insurgency.

Muqtada al-Sadr, the anti-U.S. Shiite cleric whose Mahdi Army militia is
blamed for much of Iraq's sectarian violence, was given a warm welcome by
Assad when he visited Syria last year. Al-Sadr is one of al-Maliki's main
political backers.

"Syria can play a constructive role in Iraq, but not necessarily a decisive
one," said Rami Khouri, a Beirut-based Middle East expert. "What Syria can
and can not do will not decide the future of Iraq, but it can help."



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