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Iraq: Bloodshed may spread across Mideast

Al-Maliki urges international help to fight nation's chaos

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March 10: A groundbreaking meeting with diplomats from the U.S. and Iran takes place in an effort to reduce violence in Iraq. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

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updated 8:03 p.m. ET March 10, 2007

BAGHDAD - Iraq’s prime minister appealed Saturday for international help to sever networks aiding extremists and warned envoys from neighbors and world powers that Iraq’s growing sectarian bloodshed could spill across the Middle East.

“Iraq has become a front-line battlefield,” Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki told delegates at a groundbreaking conference that brought together Islamic nations including Iran and Western representatives led by the United States.

“(Iraq) needs support in this battle that not only threatens Iraq but will spill over to all countries in the region,” he added — shortly before mortar shells landed near the conference site and a car bomb exploded in a Shitte stronghold across the city.

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Al-Maliki urged for help in stopping financial support, weapon pipelines and “religious cover” for the relentless attacks of car bombings, killings and other attacks that have pitted Iraq’s Sunnis against majority Shiites.

He expressed hope the conference could be a “turning point in supporting the government in facing this huge danger.”

Icebreaking overtures
The one-day gathering also is seen as a prime opportunity for some icebreaking overtures between Iran and the United States, whose chief delegate has left open the door for possible one-on-one exchanges about Iraq.

It brought together Iraq’s six neighbors, the five permanent U.N. Security Council members and several Arab representatives. Its primary goal is to pave the way for a high-level meeting possibly next month.

But the meeting also gives a forum to air a wide range of views and concerns including U.S. accusations of weapons smuggling from Iran and Syria, and Arab demands for greater political power for Iraq’s Sunnis.

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Iranians skeptical
March 10: NBC’s Ian Williams reports that Iranian officials remain suspicious of the U.S. agenda, but believe they have a legitimate interest in Iraq.

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Security was extremely tight as envoys gathered in Iraq’s Foreign Ministry, which is outside the heavily protected Green Zone. Shortly after the meeting began, at least two mortar shells hit near the Foreign Ministry. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

Al-Maliki said “the terrorism that kills innocents” in Iraq comes from the same root as terrorists attacks around the world since Sept. 11, 2001, in a reference to groups inspired by al-Qaida.

He also delivered an apparent warning to neighbors Syria and Iran to stay away from using Iraq as a proxy battleground for fights against the United States.

“Iraq does not accept that its territories and cities become a field where regional and international disputes are settled,” he said.

All eyes on U.S., Iran relationship
The meeting allows ample time for delegates to mingle and open informal contacts. All eyes will be on any attempts to bridge the nearly 28-year diplomatic estrangement between the United States and Iran.

The chief U.S. delegate, David Satterfield, said Thursday that “we are not going to turn and walk away” if approached by Iran or Syria to discuss Iraq. But Satterfield, the top State Department adviser on Iraq, added that the United States plans to use the meeting to reinforce its accusations against both nations.

They include U.S. claims that Syria allows foreign jihadists and Sunni insurgents to cross its border into Iraq, and that weapon shipments from Iran reach Shiite militias. Both nations deny the allegations.


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