VOANews.com

 
Live Streams:  Latest Newscast |  Africa Live |  Global Live
News in 45 Languages
US Vice President Encourages Reconciliation in Iraq


03 July 2009


VP Biden (L), US Ambassador Hill (C) and Gen. Odierno at a U.S. military base near Baghdad, Iraq, 03 Jul 2009
VP Biden (L), US Ambassador Hill (C) and Gen. Odierno at a U.S. military base near Baghdad, Iraq, 03 Jul 2009
Vice President Joe Biden is visiting U.S. soldiers and Iraqi political leaders on the first trip by a top U.S. leader to Iraq since the June 30 withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraqi towns and cities.  Biden's trip comes amid a surge of insurgent attacks that are testing the capabilities of Iraqi forces.  

The vice president told reporters in Baghdad that the Obama administration was dealing with Iraq both on the political and the military fronts, and that he was pushing for a political solution to the long-standing conflict, to accompany the drawdown of U.S. troops.

"The president wants to focus within the White House on the implementation of our administration's plan to both draw down troops in Iraq which is under way the first stage," Biden said,  "but also the second piece of that plan is for there to be a combination of a political settlement among all the factions within Iraq. There's unresolved issues from boundary disputes to the oil law and my job is to try to help accommodate that region and those agreements."

More US pullbacks planned

Iraqi officials have been speaking with new authority and confidence since the June 30 U.S. pullback from Iraqi towns and cities. Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammed al-Askari looks ahead, optimistically, to the next stage of U.S. pullbacks.

He says that the first phase of the U.S. pullout ended with the U.S. handing over 168 bases and positions to Iraqi forces. Now, he adds, the next phase will include the drawdown of U.S. forces from 135,000 to 35,000,  leading up to the final withdrawal by the end of 2011.

Spike in violence

Despite the self-assurance of Iraqi leaders, many political issues remain.  Al Qaida in Iraq has been dealt a severe blow in recent months, but other insurgent groups continue to operate.

Al-Rafidein TV played more than a half dozen videos of alleged attacks against U.S. troops, Friday, showering praise on various insurgent groups.

People gather at the site of a car bomb attack in Kirkuk, Iraq, Tuesday, 30 June 2009
People gather at the site of a car bomb attack in Kirkuk, Iraq, Tuesday, 30 June 2009
The vice president's visit coincides with a spike in violence, with several bloody bombings in Baghdad and a car bomb in Kirkuk. Tuesday, more than 30 people were killed by a powerful car bomb in Kirkuk.

Conflicts between the mostly Shi'ite government of Prime Minister al-Maliki and the hardline Sunni opposition continue. Key Sunni groups accused the prime minister of cheating during the January elections and complain regularly that he awards top posts to Shi'ites.

Some Sunnis are also not pleased by Kurdish autonomy in the north, and the prospect of the ethnically divided, oil rich city of Kirkuk going to the Kurds, has many worried.

Hardline sunni MP Iyad Samaraie told Al-Baghdadia TV that "everything the Kurds have done, including their constitution, since the U.S.-led invasion … should be considered null and void."

Dialogue encouraged

Middle East analyst Khattar Abou Diab, who is a professor at the University of Paris III, says that Vice President Biden is aiming to push Iraqi politicians to engage in more dialogue and less violence.

He says that we're now in a transition phase, following the U.S. pullout from Iraqi cities, and efforts are being made to normalize ties with Iraq. The French prime minister's visit, Thursday, he notes, is part of that normalcy, including economic ties …. [Biden's] visit, he argues,  has a larger vista: he's trying to consolidate the political dialogue now under way, to normalize the situation further before the final US pullout, and he's still facing obstacles of violence, regional meddling, and the situation in Kirkuk. Negotiations are the only way around these problems, he concludes.

June was the bloodiest month in the last eight in terms of Iraqi civilian casualties, according to Iraqi government figures, and both northern cities of Kirkuk and Mosul remain powderkegs.


Download Yeranian report
Download  (MP3)
Listen to This Report Yeranian report
Listen (MP3)
Download Simkins report
Download  (WM)
Watch This Report Simkins report
Watch  (WM)
E-mail This Article E-mail This Article
Print This Article Print Version
  Related Stories
US VP Visits Iraq Following US Troop Withdrawal From Cities
French Prime Minister Visits Iraq to Talk Business
US Troops Drawdown, Iraqis Take Security Lead
FBI Releases Details of 2004 Talks with Saddam Hussein
 
  Top Story
US House Nears Vote on Health Care Reform Measure

  More Stories
Iran Lawmakers Say Tehran Will Reject UN-Backed Nuclear Deal
G20: Financial Stimulus Still Needed to Stabilize Economic Recovery
Afghanistan: NATO Strike Kills 7 Afghan Security Members  Audio Clip Available
Israelis Rally for Peace on Rabin Anniversary
Obama Praises Those Who Ended Fort Hood Rampage
Afghanistan Rejects UN Criticism of Karzai
Navy Ship Honoring 9/11 Victims is Commissioned Into Fleet
China's Wen Promises Greater Cooperation With Arab Nations  Audio Clip Available
Pakistan Army: 12 Militants Killed in Recent Fighting
Iraqi Parliament Fails Again to Approve New Electoral Law
Medvedev: Not All Hopes Realized After Berlin Wall Fell
US Disappointed at Breakdown in Honduras Political Talks
Berlin Prepares for Celebrations 20 Years After Fall of Wall  Video clip available
Harnessing Waste Produces Gas for Cooking in Kenya  Video clip available