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Iran won’t team up with U.S. against Islamic State | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
PARIS — Iran has rejected a U.S. appeal to join a global fight against Islamic State militants, the country’s leader said Monday, as Western and Arab diplomats gathered to frame strategies against the terror network that controls large areas of Iraq and Syria. | |
Although Iran remains outside the emerging coalition for the moment, the United States said discussions with Tehran will continue — underscoring Iran’s influence in the region but also showing the political complexities of bringing the country into the emerging international alliance against the Islamic State. | |
Iran’s Shiite theocracy sees the Sunni-led Islamic State as a prime threat to its deep interests in Iraq and Syria. But Iran was excluded from the Paris conference despite appeals from Russia and others to bring Tehran into the fold. | |
Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said his country has refused the U.S. request for assistance against the Islamic State because of Washington’s “evil intentions,” the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency reported. | |
Reuters news agency quoted Khamenei as telling Iran’s state television that the American request was “hollow and self-serving,” echoing Iran’s claims that Western nations are seeking to expand their influence in the region as part of the campaign against the Islamic State. | |
Iran has already made a move in the fight. Tehran has sent its allied Shiite militias in Iraq to fight with Western-backed Kurds against the Islamic State. | |
The Kurds welcomed the help to blunt the Islamic State advances at a pivotal time before the U.S. began airstrikes. But the leader of one of the key Iran-linked militias in Iraq pledged Monday to pull back from any area where U.S. forces intervene, including possible aerial attacks. | |
Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr said his forces would leave the battlefield in the area of any U.S. attacks “whether by land or sea, directly or indirectly.” Sadr’s forces waged fierce battles against U.S. troops in the years following the 2003 American-led invasion. | |
Khamenei gave no further details on the outreach from Washington, which U.S. officials said was made during separate negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program. | |
In Paris, Secretary of State John F. Kerry also declined to elaborate on the overtures to Iran. The State Department, however, insisted that military cooperation between the longtime foes was not an option — leaving open the possibility that Washington was seeking behind-the-scenes exchanges such as intelligence sharing over a rare common foe. | |
Iran is deeply opposed to the Islamic State. Tehran’s Shiite theocracy sees the militants as a challenge to Iraq’s majority Shiites — whose political parties have close ties to Iran — and a destabilizing force against Iran’s other main regional ally, President Bashar al-Assad in Syria. | |
But Iran’s partnership in the international coalition would risk repercussions. Sunni Arab states such as Saudi Arabia — long-time rivals of Iran — are likely to oppose any high-profile role by Iran in the Islamic State showdowns. | |
State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the United States raised the issue of the militant threat during separate U.S.-Iranian negotiations aimed at curbing Iran’s disputed nuclear program, she said. | State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the United States raised the issue of the militant threat during separate U.S.-Iranian negotiations aimed at curbing Iran’s disputed nuclear program, she said. |
“It is not a secret that we have had discussions with Iran about the counter-ISIL efforts in Iraq,” Psaki said, using an alternative acronym for the Islamic State. “I am not going to outline every diplomatic discussion.” | |
She, however, ruled out any U.S. military coordination with Iran. The United States and Iran have been diplomatically estranged for more than 30 years and have long considered each other principal adversaries in the Middle East. | |
By going public with the U.S. offer Monday, Iran appeared to close off the possibility of cooperation against the militants for now. | |
“We will be continuing those talks on the nuclear issue later this week in New York,” Psaki said. “There may be another opportunity on the margins in the future to discuss Iraq.” | “We will be continuing those talks on the nuclear issue later this week in New York,” Psaki said. “There may be another opportunity on the margins in the future to discuss Iraq.” |
In Paris, Arab, European and other diplomats gathered Monday for discussions about supporting the new Iraqi government and turning back the militants, who have seized major caches of arms from Iraqi arsenals and bring in critical revenue from smuggling oil from areas they have overrun. | |
The Paris meeting came at the end of Kerry’s week-long tour of Arab allies and Turkey devoted to recruiting diplomatic and military support for the U.S.-led campaign. The trip also overlapped with the release another video showing the beheading of a Western hostage, British aid worker David Haines. | |
On Sunday, U.S. officials said Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have volunteered to launch airstrikes alongside U.S. planes. But they stressed that such an expansion was still under discussion and subject to review by Iraq, which had frosty relations with Persian Gulf states under former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki, widely viewed as a Shiite partisan who alienated Iraqi Sunnis. | |
Both the United Arab Emirates and Qatar carried out strikes during the 2011 air campaign in Libya. Qatar’s role is not entirely clear now, although it is participating in training Syrian rebels, as is Jordan. | |
Saudi Arabia is also expected to participate in expanded training of the rebels fighting both the Islamic State and Assad. | |
Opening the Paris conference, French President François Hollande said the threat from global militancy requires a coordinated and international response. France is among the European nations deeply alarmed by the flow of radicalized young men who have traveled from Europe to fight alongside the rebels and who could seek to return home. | |
“Islamic State’s doctrine is either you support us or kill us,” Iraqi President Fouad Masoum told delegates from 30 countries. “It has committed massacres and genocidal crimes and ethnic purification.” | |
Brian Murphy in Washington and Loveday Morris in Baghdad contributed to this report. | |