http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/18/international/middleeast/18iraq.html?th&emc=th

Registering New Influence, Iran Sends a Top Aide to Iraq

By JOHN F. BURNS 
Published: May 18, 2005

BAGHDAD, Iraq, May 17 - Wasting little time in registering its new
influence in Iraq, Iran sent its foreign minister to Baghdad on
Tuesday only 48 hours after Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice became
the first high-level visitor to hold talks with Iraq's new
Shiite-majority government.

The arrival of the Iranian, Kamal Kharrazi, underscored changes in the
political landscape that many Iraqis find dizzying: almost 25 years
after Iraq and Iran started an eight-year war that left a million
people dead, the government in Baghdad is now led by officials with
close personal, religious and political ties to Iran's ruling Shiite
ayatollahs.

Iraqi officials who greeted Mr. Kharrazi acknowledged that the timing
of his arrival, so soon after Ms. Rice's 12-hour visit on Sunday, was
not chance. "The political message of this visit is very important,
notably in its timing," said Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari of Iraq,
who at one point broke into fluent Persian, Iran's principal language,
during a news conference with Mr. Kharrazi.

For his part, Mr. Kharrazi appeared eager to put the United States on
notice that Iran expects to wield influence in Iraq, especially in the
long term, that will match or outstrip the United States'. At one
point, standing beside Ibrahim al-Jaafari, Iraq's new prime minister,
Mr. Kharrazi fielded a reporter's question about the competition for
influence in Iraq between Washington and Tehran with a reminder of
what he described as the geographical realities.

"Let me add that the party that will leave Iraq is the United States,
because it will eventually withdraw," he said in English, referring to
the 138,000 American troops here. "But the party that will live with
the Iraqis is Iran, because it is a neighbor to Iraq."
Dr. Jaafari and other top Shiite leaders gave Mr. Kharrazi a welcome
suffused with references to the ties they formed during years of exile
in Iran after fleeing the repression of Saddam Hussein. But there was
no escaping the competing reality of America's power here, or the
Iraqi leaders' need to balance affinities with Iran with their
acknowledged dependence on American military power to hold back Iraq's
Sunni Arab insurgency.

In his joint appearance with Mr. Kharrazi on the steps of the prime
minister's office, Dr. Jaafari focused his remarks on the new
government's determination not to allow its relations with Iran or the
United States to be prejudiced by the hostility between Tehran and
Washington. 

"We will build relationships between Iraq and other countries
according to Iraqi standards and Iraqi national interests," he said.
"We would like to see relations between Iran and the United States
that are characterized by peace and love, and by a sense of their
shared interests. But our relations with every country will be
fashioned in a way that is independent of the positive or negative
feelings they may have for any other nation."

Mr. Kharrazi arrived in Baghdad by road after crossing from Iran at
the Iranian border town of Mehran, 100 miles east of Baghdad, thus
avoiding having to use the American military helicopters that are the
inescapable form of transport for most high-level visitors to Iraq.
But at the prime minister's compound, security was led by the United
States Navy Seals in civilian dress who are Dr. Jaafari's constant
companions.

In other ways, arrangements for the Iranian's visit demonstrated the
differences between the relationships Iraq's new leaders seem likely
to have with the two foreign powers contending for influence here. Ms.
Rice, in her brief visit, met only with Iraqi political leaders and
American officials and military commanders. Iranian officials said Mr.
Kharrazi was expected to remain in Iraq for three days and to travel
to the Shiite holy city of Najaf for a meeting with Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani, the Iranian-born cleric who is the most revered and
politically influential of Iraq's Shiite religious leaders.
In the 25 months since American troops swept Mr. Hussein from power,
Ayatollah Sistani has refused to meet with American officials, leaving
them to guess exactly what political preferences - or directives, as
many Iraqis see them - he hands to the leaders of Shiite religious
parties. 

Aides to Dr. Jaafari said Mr. Kharrazi would also meet with Abdul Aziz
al-Hakim, leader of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in
Iran, or Sciri. It and Dawa are the ranking parties in the new
government. Mr. Hakim has taken no government post, but is widely
regarded as the most powerful of the Shiite political leaders. 
Among many of Iraq's hard-line Sunni Arab leaders, and still more so
among Sunni insurgent groups, the Shiite leaders' ties to Iran are a
trigger for hostility and suspicions that trace back far beyond the
Iran-Iraq war, to ancient history and the Persian conquest of Mesopotamia.

But Western scholars interviewed by telephone as Mr. Kharrazi began
his visit cautioned against seeing the new Iraqi leaders as
necessarily pliable in their relations with Iran and against any
assumption that Iranian and American interests in Iraq are strongly
opposed, at least as long as the Sunni insurgency here continues.
Shaul Bakhash, an Iran scholar at George Mason University in Virginia,
said Mr. Kharrazi's visit showed that Iraq's leaders were eager to
recognize the importance Iran, with its 800-mile border with Iraq, its
trading possibilities and its Shiite faith, will have in Iraq's future.

But he said Iraq's Shiite leaders would not be pawns of the Iranians.
"They are Iraqi nationalists, and now that they're in power, they're
less dependent on external support than they were as exiled opposition
groups," he said.
Other experts said Iran shared the United States' aim of vanquishing
the Sunni insurgency in Iraq - a point Mr. Kharrazi alluded to after
meeting with Dr. Jaafari, when he said Iran was ready to offer aid to
Iraq on matters of security. 
Fred Halliday, an international relations scholar at the London School
of Economics, said: "Both Iran and the United States want to see Sunni
insurrection defeated. Both will suffer if there is civil war in Iraq.
The Iranians do not want to see a complete American troop withdrawal now."

Troops Battle Rebels in Mosul

BAGHDAD, Iraq, May 17 (AP) - American troops backed by helicopters
battled scores of insurgents holed up in two houses in the northern
city of Mosul, the military said Tuesday. Mosul's police commander,
Lt. Gen. Ahmad Muhammad Khalaf, said 20 militants were killed when
American aircraft destroyed the buildings, but the American military
said it was unaware of any casualties.

Three Islamic clerics - a Shiite killed in a drive-by shooting and two
Sunnis who had been kidnapped - were found dead in Baghdad, the police
said Tuesday, a day after Iraq's prime minister vowed to use an "iron
fist" to end sectarian violence. 

The two Sunnis had reportedly been abducted by men in Iraqi Army
uniforms, but Defense Minister Saadoun al-Dulaimi said the government
was not involved. He also said Iraqi troops would no longer be allowed
to enter mosques, churches or universities.
An additional 17 Iraqis were killed Tuesday: two officials in separate
Baghdad drive-by shootings, six truck drivers delivering supplies to
American forces north of the capital, a former member of the Baath
Party and his three grown sons, three Mosul policemen, and two
soldiers in Baghdad. An American soldier was killed and a second
wounded when a roadside bomb struck their patrol near Tikrit, the
military said.






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