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Iraq
US 'open to Iran talks on Iraq'
2006-11-12
The White House has indicated it will consider talking to Iran and Syria about the future of Iraq.

Chief-of-staff Josh Bolten told the ABC network that President George W Bush would look at all the options when he meets a panel of advisers on Monday.

The Iraq Study Group panel, due to give its recommendations by the end of the year, is believed to favour renewing contacts with Tehran and Damascus.

In a speech on Monday, UK PM Tony Blair will call for them to be more involved.

Iraq was a key factor in the Republican defeat in mid-term polls and US defence chief Donald Rumsfeld's resignation.

Senior Democrats have urged the preparation for a phased pullout of US troops.

Blair's speech

Speaking on ABC's This Week programme, Mr Bolten - who as White House chief-of-staff is Mr Bush's closest aide - said "a fresh approach" was clearly needed on Iraq.

Asked if he favoured the idea of including Iraq's neighbours, Iran and Syria, in discussions, Mr Bolten said all options would be considered.

According to the office of Mr Blair, the UK prime minister will call for their greater involvement during a keynote speech in London's financial centre on Monday.

An aide said Mr Blair would "make clear to Syria and Iran the basis on which they can help the peaceful development of the Middle East rather than hinder it; and the consequences of not doing so".

Phased withdrawal

The Iraq Study group, the bipartisan US task force asked by Congress to examine the effectiveness of policy in Iraq, is to meet Mr Bush at the White House on Monday.

The panel, which is led by former US Secretary of State James Baker, reportedly thinks that "staying the course" is an untenable long-term strategy.

It is said to have been looking at two options, both of which would amount to a reversal of the Bush administration's stance.

One is the phased withdrawal of US troops, and the other is to increase contact with Syria and Iran to help stop the fighting.

In his interview, Mr Bolten dismissed calls for a fixed timetable for the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq.

The US military confirmed that three US soldiers had been killed in fighting in Iraq's Anbar province on Saturday.

More than 2,800 US troops have died in Iraq since the US-led invasion in 2003.

Meanwhile four British servicemen have been killed following a bomb attack on a patrol boat in southern Iraq.

Another three suffered serious injuries in the incident, which took place during a routine patrol along the Shatt al-Arab waterway in Basra.

Posted by:tipper

#2  HHHHHHHHHHHMMMMMMMMMMM, so IRAN = NORTH VIETNAM, thereby proving that Tehran has no ambition nor agenda o'er Baghdad = Saigon???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2006-11-12 22:54  

#1  I'll give you increased contact....
Posted by: KBK   2006-11-12 22:47  

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