Rice Reaches Out To Iraq Neighbors For Helping Hand

Team Infidel

Forum Spin Doctor
Miami Herald
May 2, 2007
By Warren P. Strobel
With sectarian violence in Iraq raging unabated despite the U.S. troop surge, and with a political donnybrook at home over funding the war, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice flew to the Middle East on Tuesday to enlist the help of Iraq's neighbors in preventing the country from fracturing.
Senior envoys from Iran and Syria, longtime adversaries that the Bush administration until now has held at arms' length, are among those attending Rice's two and a half days of meetings in the Egyptian seaside resort of Sharm el Sheik.
Rice urged Iran to take part, underscoring how urgently the White House is seeking help from other Middle East nations to stabilize Iraq.
But the diplomatic parley may yield few concrete accomplishments, according to outside analysts and even some Bush administration officials.
A sudden breakthrough with Iran, which the United States accuses of supplying weaponry to Iraqi militias, seems unlikely given the depth of distrust between the two nations. U.S. and Iranian officials indicated that Rice and her Iranian counterpart, Manoucher Mottaki, may not even hold one-on-one talks.
And despite the danger at their doorstep, Arab nations such as Saudi Arabia remain reluctant to play a more forceful role in ending Iraq's civil war.
''They don't want to be responsible for rescuing Iraq. And they don't want to be responsible for its failure, either,'' said former CIA analyst Judith Yaphe, now at the National Defense University.
In a blow to Rice's diplomatic strategy, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia refused to receive Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki before the meetings in Egypt. Saudi Arabia sees itself as the Arab world's leading Sunni Muslim state, and looks with a mix of dread and contempt at Shiite-led Iraq and its close ties to Iran.
U.S. options limited
Rice will tell Iraq's neighbors that helping the Baghdad government isn't a matter of bailing out the United States so much as it's about averting chaos for themselves, according to two State Department officials.
If Iraq's social fabric frays further, ''it's certainly conceivable that violence could spread across Iraq's borders'' and that its neighbors will ''bear responsibility,'' said a senior State Department official, previewing Rice's approach on condition of anonymity.
The neighbors, however, seem likely to blame the United States instead. Rice's hand is all the weaker after Bush's veto of the Democratic Congress' attempt to tie the funding of U.S. troops in Iraq to a timetable for withdrawal.
Beyond pledges of debt relief for Iraq and general statements of support for Maliki's central government, it seems unlikely that the meetings will produce much.
Economic goals
On Thursday, Rice will join representatives from roughly 70 countries to finalize the ''International Compact with Iraq,'' an accord that gives Iraq international economic backing and debt relief in return for undertaking economic reforms.
Maliki's government has been under intense U.S. pressure for months to approve a law on the distribution of the country's oil revenues.
On Friday, Rice will participate in a meeting with Iraq and its neighbors focused on curbing the flow of arms and fighters across its borders to Shiite militias and Sunni insurgents.
McClatchy Newspapers' Nancy A. Youssef contributed to this report.
 
Back
Top