From an Article on Salon.com:
Meanwhile, Sunni leaders in Iraq are telling the U.S. to stop meddling in Iraq's affairs:
In the U.S.'s case, national security was the primary reason for invading Iraq (invading can be considered "meddling," right?). Cannot Iran, which is much closer geographically, use the same reason to justify their "meddling"? Can we really expect them to sit idly by and not try to exert their own influence over what is going on in Iraq?
Of course, most would prefer that if they are going to exert their own influence in Iraq it would not take the form of supplying IEDs to "insurgents," but that is a claim for which the Bush administration has no proof.
Pot, meet kettle.Meanwhile, a top Iranian official said his country was ready to open direct talks with the United States over Iraq, marking a major shift in foreign policy a day after al-Hakim called for such talks.
[...]
"To resolve Iraqi issues and help establishment of an independent and free government in Iraq, we agree to (talks with the United States)," Larijani said after a closed meeting of the parliament Thursday.
Larijani said Khalilzad had invited Iran for talks on Iraq.
Washington repeatedly has accused Iran of meddling in Iraq's affairs and of sending weapons and men to help insurgents in Iraq, allegations the Iranians have denied.
Meanwhile, Sunni leaders in Iraq are telling the U.S. to stop meddling in Iraq's affairs:
So who really is meddling here? The U.S., Iran, or both? Or perhaps there is "good" meddling and there is "bad meddling," and what the U.S. is doing is the former and what Iran is doing is the latter. Or perhaps the distinction is not good vs. bad, but justified vs. unjustified?Sunni Arab political leaders on Friday denounced an agreement between the United States and Iran to hold face-to-face talks about solutions to the unrest in Iraq, saying the conversations would amount to meddling by foreign nations in Iraq's domestic affairs.
The Iraqi Consensus Front, the country's main Sunni political bloc, issued a statement calling the agreement "an obvious unjustified interference" and asserted that it was not obligated to comply with any results of the negotiations.
[...]
"The Iraqis in the current government should have these talks with the Iranians and discuss the level of intervention of Iran," Naseer al-Ani, a member of the Sunni Arab bloc, said in a telephone interview. "It's not up to the American ambassador to talk to Iran about Iraq."
In the U.S.'s case, national security was the primary reason for invading Iraq (invading can be considered "meddling," right?). Cannot Iran, which is much closer geographically, use the same reason to justify their "meddling"? Can we really expect them to sit idly by and not try to exert their own influence over what is going on in Iraq?
Of course, most would prefer that if they are going to exert their own influence in Iraq it would not take the form of supplying IEDs to "insurgents," but that is a claim for which the Bush administration has no proof.