Iran plans to expand ties with Iraq: Tehran envoy
Mon Jan 29, 9:27 AM ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Iran is taking steps to greatly expand military and economic ties with Iraq, Tehran’s ambassador to Iraq said in an interview on Sunday with New York Times.
The ambassador, Hassan Kazemi Qomi, said Iran was prepared to offer Iraqi forces training, equipment and advisers for “the security fight” and was ready to assume major responsibility for the reconstruction of Iraq.
He also acknowledged for the first time that two Iranians detained last month by U.S. forces were security officials as the United States has claimed.
“They worked in the security sector in the Islamic Republic, that’s clear,” Qomi said in a 90-minute interview at the Iranian Embassy in Baghdad. The interview appeared in Monday’s New York Times.
The Iranians were in Iraq because “the two countries agreed to solve the security problems,” the ambassador said. The Iranians “went to meet with the Iraqi side,” he told the newspaper.
Qomi said the Iranians should not have been detained and he ridiculed evidence the U.S. military said it has which proving the Iranians were involved in planning attacks on American and Iraqi forces.
Qomi also announced that Iran would soon open a national bank in Baghdad. An Iraqi banking official confirmed that Iran has received a license to open what would be the first “wholly owned subsidiary bank” of a foreign country in Iraq, the newspaper reported.
Read the rest here.