Font Size:26/03/2013 (00:01 pm) - The number of readings: 299 - Issue (2758)
CBS: two hours of heated debate between Kerry and al-Maliki about the lion did not lead to a result
Translation term
According to CBS News that about two hours of "heated debate" did not lead to an agreement between the U.S. Secretary of State and the Prime Minister of Iraq on flights Iranian cross-domain Iraqi, warned against Kerry-Maliki that influence Iraqi in Syria in the future will be limited, if not deliberately Baghdad to take steps to stop Iranian aid to Damascus.
The network said that U.S. Secretary of State told Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said Iraq should take steps to stop the flow of Iranian weapons and militants to Syria through Iraqi airspace. But almost two hours of "heated debate" between Kerry and Maliki did not produce any immediate agreement. And attached to the network by saying that the United States believes that Iraq allow Iran to use its airspace to deliver weapons to the Assad regime on an almost daily basis. In a press conference held after the meeting, John Kerry said that flights from Iran "problematic" and that it "helps to keep President Assad and his regime." Kerry said he had agreed to provide the Iraqi government with more information on the Iranian flights and deadly cargoes. But the Iraqi government confirms that the Iranian aircraft movement of humanitarian aid only. The network said a senior U.S. official, unnamed, John Kerry was accompanied on the trip said that intelligence information "real" contradict this claim, but refused to give details of how they got this information or how it happened many Iranian flights.
He also noted U.S. Secretary of State that there are members of Congress and others, "watching increasingly about what he does Iraq."
The network felt that Kerry's remarks this brings to mind what Kerry said when he was a senator last September that Congress should consider regarding American aid for Iraq on the basis of Iraqi response. The network indicated that Kerry's visit to Iraq, his first in office, comes amid concern of diminishing American influence and the increasing approach of the government of Prime Minister Maliki to neighboring Iran. The network added that al-Maliki has long relationships with Iranian and Syrian officials when an opponent. He has built relationships that during the seventies in an effort to get help overthrow of Saddam's regime. Since he became al-Maliki as prime minister, proved to be useful in relations strengthen his grip on power. However, there are problematic for the United States and its efforts to isolate Iran and cut off the regime of Bashar al-Assad. The network says that the United States believes that the Iranian army and fighters backed by Iran, such as Hezbollah fought alongside the army Bashar Assad over the past two years of civil war in Syria. The United States is also concerned that al Qaeda militants entering Syria across the Iraqi border.
The network quotes a U.S. official described بالكبير saying that recent clashes between a group of al-Qaida in Iraq and members of the Syrian army is evidence of the breadth of what is happening in Syria.
The network said that Prime Minister Maliki had publicly expressed his fears that the fall of the Assad regime would cause a political vacuum, and the possible spread of sectarian tensions and violence of civil war in Syria into Iraq. The network continues saying that Kerry, during his meetings in Baghdad, Prime Minister Maliki warned that Iraq's influence in the future of Syria will be limited unless his government is working to cut support for the Assad regime.
She drew the network, referring to the decline of American influence, that the United States does not currently maintains military forces in Iraq and U.S. diplomatic presence also declined. The U.S. Embassy, which is the largest diplomatic compound in the world, had made a cut on its cadres. By the end of 2013, number of employees will be 5 100 all Direct staff for the U.S. government. And there were 16 thousand workers at the embassy in the past year.
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