/ 21 November 2006

Iraq, Syria restore ties after a quarter century

Iraq and neighbouring Syria agreed to restore full diplomatic relations on Tuesday in an accord in which Syria accepted that United States troops should stay while the Iraqi government needed them.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem was making the first visit by a Syrian minister to Iraq since the US-led invasion in 2003. The two countries severed ties when Damascus sided with Iran in the 1980 to 1988 Iran-Iraq war.

The agreement to reopen their embassies in Damascus and Baghdad comes amid mounting calls for President George Bush to open talks with US adversaries Syria and Iran as his administration considers a change of course in Iraq.

US and Iraqi officials accuse Tehran of backing Shi’ite militias and Syria of supporting Sunni insurgents. They have long complained that Syria has done too little to seal its border to stem the flow of foreign Islamist fighters.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani will fly to Tehran on Saturday and visit Damascus soon, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari said, denying a report that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad would join a summit in Iran this week.

The two governments agreed to restore full diplomatic ties, reopening their embassies in Damascus and Baghdad. An agreement in principle was struck some months ago. Ambassadors with full rank would be named and flags raised over embassies shortly.

”We hope to follow this step with real and practical procedures so we can have an official channel for continuous dialogue,” Zebari said at a joint news conference with Moualem.

Iraq has said it expects to set up a joint security committee with Syria and improve trade.

In the document, Syria and Iraq agreed on the need for US-led forces to stay in Iraq until they were no longer needed, after which they would be gradually withdrawn.

”The Iraqi government explained its position on the matter and that the presence of these forces is dependent on the approval of the Iraqi government,” Zebari said.

Moualem had earlier called for the setting of a timetable for the withdrawal of 140 000 US troops.

After meeting Iraqi leaders on Monday, Moualem pledged Syria’s cooperation in tackling violence that has raised the spectre of civil war, saying it was prepared to work ”hand in hand to achieve the security of brother Iraq”.

Zebari said there was no agreement for a three-way summit in Tehran that included Syria, but said President Jalal Talabani had received an invitation to visit Damascus soon.

”We did not agree on a three-way summit that includes Iraq, Syria and Iran,” he said. ”Syria’s foreign minister invited the president to visit Damascus and we hope that it will be achieved in the nearest opportunity.” — Reuters