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Talks target 'epidemic' of Iraq violence

By

Originally published 01:07 a.m., March 11, 2007, updated 12:00 a.m., March 11, 2007

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BAGHDAD -- Punctuated by explosions from mortar shells falling nearby, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki opened a much-anticipated international conference yesterday with a plea for help in ending his nation's "epidemic" of violence.

Behind closed doors, envoys from the United States and Iran accused each other of fomenting the bloodshed that threatens to tear Iraq apart. And though U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad described the session as "constructive," he did not meet one-on-one with Iranian representatives as some had expected.

"This international epidemic, the price of which is being paid by the people of Iraq, with Iraq its first theater of confrontation, needs to be met by an international stand," Mr. al-Maliki said in opening the one-day meeting held in Iraq's Foreign Affairs Ministry building in downtown Baghdad.

Later, as delegates conferred behind closed doors, a car bomb in the Sadr City section of northeastern Baghdad killed up to 18 persons and injured 40. "This is part of the threat toward us," Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said of the attack.

While U.S., Iranian and Syrian envoys did not sit down to much-anticipated talks with each other, they did shake hands before the meetings began and spoke directly to one another during multilateral talks involving Iraq's security, according to Mr. al-Dabbagh.

Mr. Khalilzad said both nations expressed an interest in bilateral talks with Washington.

"They are willing to engage bilaterally, as well as multilaterally, and that there is, from their perspective, an area of common interest with regard to helping Iraq stabilize and succeed, and in the course of the discussions about the issues, offering proposals to narrow the differences between the various sides," he said.

"The overall mood was businesslike, constructive exchanges, nobody was pounding the table, the exchanges were quite, I would say, ordinary, and there was a frank and sometimes even jovial exchanges," he said after the meeting.

Mr. Khalilzad declined to provide details of the discussions.

The Associated Press reported that one note of discord came when U.S. envoy David Satterfield pointed to his briefcase, which he said contained documents proving Iran was arming Shi'ite Muslim militias in Iraq.

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