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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: goldworldnet who wrote (690627)7/7/2005 11:16:57 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof   of 769670
 
Iraq signs military pact with Iran

By Peter Graff 17 minutes ago
news.yahoo.com

Iraq signed a military pact with Iran on Thursday in a breakthrough with a former foe, but al Qaeda said it would kill Egypt's kidnapped envoy and attack more diplomats to stop the government winning international support.

Defense Minister Saadoun al-Dulaimi signed a pact in Tehran agreeing to accept Iranian military training and other cooperation with the country Iraq fought for a decade under ousted leader Saddam Hussein.

Responding to the suggestion that the thaw in ties with Iran would anger Washington, Dulaimi said: "Nobody can dictate to Iraq its relations with other countries."

Iraq is anxiously trying to improve its ties with other Muslim countries to win legitimacy and undermine insurgent support. But mainly Sunni-led Arab states have been cautious about embracing the Shi'ite-dominated, U.S.-backed Iraqi authorities.

Al Qaeda's Iraq wing, led by Jordanian Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi, said it would kill Egypt's top envoy Ihab el-Sherif, issuing photographs of personal documents as proof it held him.

Its statement referred to a "sharp sword against the infidels' ambassador," an apparent hint that he could be beheaded. It included no demands or possibility of negotiation. Zarqawi's followers have frequently filmed beheadings of captives for maximum political impact.

"The sharia court of al Qaeda Organization in Iraq has decided to hand the apostate, the ambassador of Egypt which is allied to Jews and Christians, to the mujahideen to ... kill him," said the group. Cairo did not comment on the statement.

Sherif's abduction off the streets on Saturday was the first in a series of strikes on diplomats.

Pakistan withdrew its ambassador from Baghdad on Tuesday after his motorcade was attacked by gunmen. Bahrain's envoy was shot in the hand in his car in an apparent kidnap attempt.

The al Qaeda statement threatened more such strikes.

"This will be the fate of ambassadors of the tyrannical states because Jihadist Iraq today is not secure for infidels ... and America cannot protect itself, let alone others."

BOMBS SOUTH OF BAGHDAD

A double car bomb attack killed at least 13 people and wounded 27 overnight in al-Mashru, near Hilla south of Baghdad, in the worst bombing attack for several days, Polish forces in the area said. Locals blamed al Qaeda.

"Only Shi'ites are targeted," Raad Hadeed Salman, a witness, shouted amid an angry crowd at the scene of the blast. "There were no police here, no Americans and no army soldiers. Zarqawi is targeting only Shi'ites."

In Mosul in the north, where Kurds and Arabs have feuded for control, some 12 mortars aimed at a local government headquarters fell into a crowded neighborhood of shops. Hospital sources said at least 46 people were injured and three confirmed killed.

Zarqawi's guerrillas are Sunni Muslims, allied with Iraqi Sunni insurgents against the Shi'ite and Kurdish-led government in Iraq and its U.S. backers, although many Iraqi Sunnis reject the violence and foreign influence of Zarqawi's followers.

U.S. and Iraqi leaders hope that a rift in the insurgency will bring more Iraqi Sunnis into politics.

Iraqi Sunni Arab groups took their biggest step into the political process on Wednesday, with 15 Sunni delegates joining the committee to draft a new constitution.

The American military said it was holding five U.S. citizens, apparently including a Los Angeles filmmaker, among more than 10,000 detainees in Iraq.

(Additional reporting by Salem Uraiby in al-Mashru and Maher al-Thanoon in Mosul)

Copyright © 2005 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2005 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
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