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KurdistanObserver.com
Bush Speaks to Iraq and Kurdistan Leaders
Amid Violence
Feb 25, 2006
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush spoke to
seven Iraqi political leaders on Saturday in an effort to defuse the sectarian
violence that threatens the goal of a self-sufficient Iraq free of U.S. military
involvement.
Bush's extraordinary round of early morning
telephone diplomacy involved his first conversations with Iraqi leaders since
the bombing of a revered Shiite shrine that prompted days of reprisal attacks.
There are fears in Baghdad and Washington alike
that Iraq could be on the brink of civil war nearly three years after the U.S.
invasion ousted Saddam Hussein's regime. The violence put a halt to talks on the
formation of a unity government, a step regarded as key to demoralizing the
Sunni-dominated insurgency and setting the stage for the end of the U.S.
military presence there.
"The president congratulated Iraq's leaders for
their strong leadership and their efforts to calm the situation and for their
statements against violence and for restraint," said Frederick Jones, a
spokesman for the White House's National Security Council.
Bush "encouraged them to continue to work
together to thwart the efforts of the perpetrators of the violence to sow
discord among Iraq's communities," Jones said.
In calls that took place over about an hour,
Bush did not speak with any of Iraq's influential religious leaders. Instead, he
chose the most powerful representatives of each of Iraq's main political groups:
Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, a Shiite; the head of Iraq's largest
Shiite political party and the country's most powerful Shiite politician, Abdul-Aziz
al-Hakim; Iraqi National Assembly president Hajim al-Hassani, a Sunni; Tariq al-Hashemi,
a leader of the main Sunni coalition; Ayad Allawi, a former Iraqi premier who's
a secular Shiite with Sunni allies; Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd; and
Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani.
Bush pressed each of the leaders to find a way
to restart U.S.-backed negotiations among Shia, Sunni and Kurdish leaders to
fashion a permanent government. The largest Sunni Arab bloc in parliament said
Saturday it will reconsider its decision to pull out of the talks if al-Jaafari
follows through on promises that the government will act to ease the crisis.
"The president underscored his support for
Iraq's efforts to build a government of national unity," Jones said.
Bush expressed his condolences for Wednesday's
bombing of the golden-domed Askariya Shrine in Samarra and the cycle of
retaliatory attacks that followed, Jones said. Nearly 200 have died, and scores
of Sunni and Shiite mosques have been damaged.
Extraordinary security measures have been in
place, including a daytime curfew and bans on some travel. Shiite and Sunni
leaders have called for unity between the sects. Still, there was a surge of new
attacks on Saturday.
The White House chose to focus on the positive
and disputed that there had been a resumption in violence.
"The president has been pleased with the
restraint shown," Jones said.
He would not comment on why the president felt
compelled to make the calls, or provide any detail on what any of the leaders
told Bush about what could be done. |