Iraq lawmakers reject draft pact
BAGHDAD (AP) - New U.S. proposals have failed to overcome Iraqi opposition to a proposed security pact, two lawmakers said Thursday, and a senior government official expressed doubt an agreement could be reached before the U.S. presidential election in November.
Iraqi reinforcements, meanwhile, arrived in the oil-producing southern city of Amarah on Thursday as the military geared up for another crackdown against Shiite militia fighters, officials said. The Interior Ministry denied a new offensive was imminent.
The security agreement would provide a legal basis for the presence of U.S. forces in Iraq after the U.N. mandate expires at the end of this year. Failure to strike a deal would leave the future of the American military presence here to the next administration.
U.S. negotiators offered new proposals this week after Iraqi lawmakers expressed outrage over the direction of the negotiations, claiming that accepting the U.S. position would cement American military, political and economic domination of this country.
Iman al-Asadi, a Shiite member of the parliamentary committee on legal affairs, said the latest American version "wasn't satisfactory to say the least."
She said the American proposals contained "some good points but they were not up to what we had expected." Al-Asadi said the committee had recommended to the negotiators that they reject the latest draft, the fourth since the talks began last March.
Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Othman confirmed al-Asadi's comments, adding that "we will not sign" the agreement as proposed by Washington.
U.S. officials have refused to release details of the talks while they are still under way but have expressed their respect for Iraqi sovereignty.
The top State Department adviser on Iraq, David Satterfield, told reporters this week that the two sides would meet a July target date to finish the agreement, which must be ratified by the Iraqi parliament.
President Bush told reporters this week in Germany that he was also confident that a deal would be reached.
But a senior Iraqi official told The Associated Press that the chance of finalizing an agreement before the U.S. presidential election was "slim," although he added that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government was interested in a deal if it served Iraqi interests.
The official is familiar with the negotiations but spoke on condition of anonymity to protect his position.
He said Iraqis were disappointed that the Americans were not offering a firm commitment to defend the country from foreign invasion - a move that would require U.S. Senate ratification.
The Bush administration has said it does not need congressional approval for the agreement despite demands from Democrats that Congress have a role if the pact commits U.S. forces to remain in Iraq long-term.
Several Iraqi lawmakers said a major obstacle was the U.S. demand for immunity from prosecution in Iraqi courts for all American personnel, including both troops and civilian contractors.
Al-Asadi said the latest U.S. proposals limited immunity to American military personnel but that was not enough.
"What happens to our dignity? What happens to our sovereignty? We want immunity to be lifted," she said.
She also said the Americans had softened their demand for control of a considerable part of Iraq's airspace but that the Iraqis insisted on full control.
"If the U.S. controls the air, the ground and the sea, this means no sovereignty," she said.
Al-Asadi refused to release further details or talk about how many bases the United States wanted access to under the agreement. She said the Americans were now avoiding talk of numbers of bases but were asking for an "American presence" until Iraqi security forces were deemed ready to take over from U.S.-led forces.
She said the agreement included no timetable for drawing down American forces and "this is a scandal."
Meanwhile, al-Maliki met Thursday with Jordan's King Abdullah II during a one-day visit to Amman. The two leaders discussed resuming oil exports to Jordan and ways to prevent Islamic militants from joining the insurgency in Iraq.
Sunni Muslim Jordan has been critical of al-Maliki's Shiite-dominated government, which Arabs accuse of leaning toward Iran. Jordan believes that hard-line Tehran leaders want to spread Shiite influence across the largely Sunni Arab world. Al-Maliki visited Iran last weekend.
The arrival of Iraqi reinforcements in the southern city of Amarah came after many militia chiefs fled there and to Iran to escape a security crackdown this past March in Basra, 100 miles to the south, according to U.S. and Iraqi commanders.
A local security official in Amarah said new checkpoints also have been built on the roads south to Basra, north to Baghdad and east to a border crossing with Iran in preparation for an offensive. Amarah and surrounding Maysan province are believed to be the center of weapons smuggling from Iran to Shiite extremists in Iraq.
The security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to release the information, said only lower-level militiamen were left in Amarah.
A member of the Maysan provincial council, which is dominated by loyalists of al-Sadr, said reinforcements had arrived and that political groups were trying to defuse the situation. He also declined to be identified for the same reason.
Interior Ministry spokesman Abdul-Karim Khalaf denied that an imminent operation was planned in Amarah.
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Iraqi reinforcements, meanwhile, arrived in the oil-producing southern city of Amarah on Thursday as the military geared up for another crackdown against Shiite militia fighters, officials said. The Interior Ministry denied a new offensive was imminent.
The security agreement would provide a legal basis for the presence of U.S. forces in Iraq after the U.N. mandate expires at the end of this year. Failure to strike a deal would leave the future of the American military presence here to the next administration.
U.S. negotiators offered new proposals this week after Iraqi lawmakers expressed outrage over the direction of the negotiations, claiming that accepting the U.S. position would cement American military, political and economic domination of this country.
Iman al-Asadi, a Shiite member of the parliamentary committee on legal affairs, said the latest American version "wasn't satisfactory to say the least."
She said the American proposals contained "some good points but they were not up to what we had expected." Al-Asadi said the committee had recommended to the negotiators that they reject the latest draft, the fourth since the talks began last March.
Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Othman confirmed al-Asadi's comments, adding that "we will not sign" the agreement as proposed by Washington.
U.S. officials have refused to release details of the talks while they are still under way but have expressed their respect for Iraqi sovereignty.
The top State Department adviser on Iraq, David Satterfield, told reporters this week that the two sides would meet a July target date to finish the agreement, which must be ratified by the Iraqi parliament.
President Bush told reporters this week in Germany that he was also confident that a deal would be reached.
But a senior Iraqi official told The Associated Press that the chance of finalizing an agreement before the U.S. presidential election was "slim," although he added that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government was interested in a deal if it served Iraqi interests.
The official is familiar with the negotiations but spoke on condition of anonymity to protect his position.
He said Iraqis were disappointed that the Americans were not offering a firm commitment to defend the country from foreign invasion - a move that would require U.S. Senate ratification.
The Bush administration has said it does not need congressional approval for the agreement despite demands from Democrats that Congress have a role if the pact commits U.S. forces to remain in Iraq long-term.
Several Iraqi lawmakers said a major obstacle was the U.S. demand for immunity from prosecution in Iraqi courts for all American personnel, including both troops and civilian contractors.
Al-Asadi said the latest U.S. proposals limited immunity to American military personnel but that was not enough.
"What happens to our dignity? What happens to our sovereignty? We want immunity to be lifted," she said.
She also said the Americans had softened their demand for control of a considerable part of Iraq's airspace but that the Iraqis insisted on full control.
"If the U.S. controls the air, the ground and the sea, this means no sovereignty," she said.
Al-Asadi refused to release further details or talk about how many bases the United States wanted access to under the agreement. She said the Americans were now avoiding talk of numbers of bases but were asking for an "American presence" until Iraqi security forces were deemed ready to take over from U.S.-led forces.
She said the agreement included no timetable for drawing down American forces and "this is a scandal."
Meanwhile, al-Maliki met Thursday with Jordan's King Abdullah II during a one-day visit to Amman. The two leaders discussed resuming oil exports to Jordan and ways to prevent Islamic militants from joining the insurgency in Iraq.
Sunni Muslim Jordan has been critical of al-Maliki's Shiite-dominated government, which Arabs accuse of leaning toward Iran. Jordan believes that hard-line Tehran leaders want to spread Shiite influence across the largely Sunni Arab world. Al-Maliki visited Iran last weekend.
The arrival of Iraqi reinforcements in the southern city of Amarah came after many militia chiefs fled there and to Iran to escape a security crackdown this past March in Basra, 100 miles to the south, according to U.S. and Iraqi commanders.
A local security official in Amarah said new checkpoints also have been built on the roads south to Basra, north to Baghdad and east to a border crossing with Iran in preparation for an offensive. Amarah and surrounding Maysan province are believed to be the center of weapons smuggling from Iran to Shiite extremists in Iraq.
The security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to release the information, said only lower-level militiamen were left in Amarah.
A member of the Maysan provincial council, which is dominated by loyalists of al-Sadr, said reinforcements had arrived and that political groups were trying to defuse the situation. He also declined to be identified for the same reason.
Interior Ministry spokesman Abdul-Karim Khalaf denied that an imminent operation was planned in Amarah.
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