Rice would not rule out meeting Iran's foreign minister [Reuters]
Iran has said it will attend a conference of key powers, including the US, this week to discuss security in Iraq.
Iraq says the
meeting in Egypt could be a turning point for regional co-operation in
easing violence in the war-torn country, and it also paves the way for
the first high-level meeting between the US and Iran in a long time.
Condoleezza Rice,
the US secretary of state, said she would be at the May 3-4 meeting at
the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh "not to talk about US-Iranian
issues but to talk about Iraq", but she would not rule out meeting
Manoucher Mottaki, Iran's foreign minister.
"I will not rule out that we may encounter each other," she said.
Rice suggested that if the two sides were to meet, she would reiterate US calls on Iran to stop aiding fighters in Iraq.
"What do we need to do? It's quite obvious," Rice told ABC television in the US.
"Stop the flow of
arms to foreign fighters. Stop the flow of foreign fighters across the
borders... Stop stirring up trouble among militias that then go and
kill innocent Iraqis. It's quite clear what needs to be done."
Tehran said it would send a delegation led by Mottaki "with the aim of helping the Iraqi nation and government".
Battleground
The announcement of
Iran's participation followed weeks of intense lobbying by Baghdad,
which had sought to persuade Iran to take part despite Tehran's anger
over the detention by US forces of five Iranians in northern Iraq in
January.
Hoshiyar Zebari,
Iraq's foreign minister, said there was a "high possibility" that Iran
and the US would hold bilateral talks and said any meeting between the
two sides "would be a major breakthrough and any reduction in tensions
will positively impact the situation in Iraq".
"We don't want Iraq
to be a battleground for settling scores on other agendas at our cost.
Really, this has been harming us, damaging us a lot."
The conference will
also bring together officials from G8 nations, the European Union and
Iraq's neighbours, including Syria and Turkey.
A report by the US
congress-commissioned Iraq Study Group this year recommended talks with
Syria and Iran to help stabilise Iraq.
But the Bush administration has taken no concrete steps to engage Iran.
In fact, the
relationship has worsened, with the five Iranians being detained by the
US and Iran announcing plans to further enrich uranium despite UN
Security Council sanctions.
Iranian officials
reject preconditions as the basis for any bilateral talks, and say that
the US has not given them the respect they deserve.
Saudi snub
Meanwhile, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia has turned down a request to meet Nuri al-Maliki, Iraq's prime minister.
Zebari confirmed the refusal but denied it was a snub.
He said a Washington Post
report that Abdullah had refused to receive al-Maliki before the Sharm
el-Sheikh regional summit because the Sunni leader was sceptical of
al-Maliki's Shia was "not true".
"This time the Saudi king, his schedule was not suitable for this timing," Zebari said.
"So they did not decline
it, but they said the king has an internal tour which he does every now
and again. So we couldn't agree on the timing."
Rice said the Egypt conference would offer al-Maliki the chance to make the case for his government.
"There's no doubt that the Saudi government has concerns about the process of reconciliation in Iraq," she said.
She said al-Maliki could
show neighbouring countries at the conference, "what also needs to be
demonstrated to the Iraqi people, that this government is behaving in
an even-handed fashion".
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