Larry Kaplow
|
Feb 26, 2008 08:18 PM
Atta Kenare / AFP-Getty Images
From Tehran to Baghdad: Ahmadinejad
will visit the Iraqi capital in March
So far U.S. officials say they won't be attending any events
during Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's planned visit to Baghdad March 2. And the
Iranian president might make it easy for them to avoid the awkwardness
of bumping into each other in the Green Zone–-say, at an embassy "Salsa
Night" or the "Liberty" pool. Iraqis planning the itinerary say that
their guest has asked to stay outside the fortified area in a riverside
compound belonging to his official host, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani.
Ahmadinejad
is expected to sleep over one night and hold meetings with Iraqi
officials, maybe sign an agreement or two, and hold a joint press
conference with Talabani. Naseer al-Ani, director of the Iraqi
Presidency office (remember, there's a president and two
vice-presidents from the different ethnic and religious factions) told
NEWSWEEK the plan now is to not rely on any U.S. assistance for
security or other logistics–-though that could change.
A U.S.
Embassy official said that America will offer any logistical help the
Iraqis request–-as the Americans have when other dignitaries have
visited. Iran and Iraq share a long border and many common issues and
interests, so the embassy is treating it as a routine summit between
two heads of state–-though the other neighboring rulers haven't dropped
by yet. Given that Iraq has traditionally had bitter relations with all
its bordering nations–-Turkey is currently invading the north–-Iran is
probably the friendliest neighbor to Iraq's Shiite-led government and
its Kurds, if not for its Sunni Arabs).
A remaining question is
whether there are any guarantees that U.S. troops won't spoil the party
by arresting Ahmadinejad–-as they have other Iranian diplomatic guests
who they accused of funneling assistance to anti-American forces.
Al-Ani, stunned into momentary silence when asked about this, said, "I
don't know what to say. It can't happen," Yeah, probably not. After
all, the Iranian president has already visited New York for a United
Nations summit and made it out safely. He should be able to thread his
way through the western contractors and U.S. troops surrounding the
Baghdad International Airport.
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