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Iranian troops deployed on Iraqi border: Kurds

In recent days, Iranian troops, including the elite Revolutionary Guard, have been deployed... along the 2,000 kilometer (1,200 mile) border

TEHRAN, Aug 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Iran is amassing troops on its border with Iraq in case a U.S. invasion topples Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, two Kurdish parties said Thursday August 22, 2002.

"Iranian troops have returned to the positions they held during the (1980-1988) Iran-Iraq war," said the Revolutionary Union of Kurdistan (RUK) chief Hussein Yazdanpana, who lives in the eastern city of Arbil, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

In recent days, Iranian troops, including the elite Revolutionary Guard, "have been deployed... along the 2,000 kilometer (1,200 mile) border," he said.

Iran has also closed its border crossing to the northern Iraqi Kurdish enclave, he added.

Meanwhile, a member of the rival Kurdish Democratic Party also confirmed Iranian troops were amassing on the border.

The KDP is one of two major Kurdish parties that control the western-protected enclave in northern Iraq, which has been off-limits to the Baghdad government since the end of the 1991 Gulf War.

On Thursday, August 22, Secretary of the arbitrative Expediency Council, Mohsen Rezaie, said that Iran should shake off its "passivity" toward a possible U.S. attack on Iraq, since the lives of Iraqi people were on the line, Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported. 

"It is wrong to think that only America and the Iraqi President Saddam Hussein are involved in this issue and that there is no third party," Rezaie, who was the former head of the Islamic Revolution's Guards Corps, said.

"The front of the Iraqi people must not be ignored," he said, adding "we must play an effective role in regional developments by adopting an active diplomacy."

Iran has added voice to an international opposition to a probable U.S. attack on Iraq on grounds of trying to unseat Saddam.    

Tehran early this month announced that it will not admit any refugees in the event of Washington's military action and will instead give them assistance outside Iran's territory on Iraqi soil. 

Interior Minister Abdulwahed Moussavi- Lari said that the Islamic Republic would make no repeat of the 1991 Persian Gulf War when Tehran admitted more than one million Iraqi refugees, IRNA added.                

The country is heavily burdened with over two million Afghan refugees who have been residing in Iran for over two decades.        

Later in Baghdad, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's elder son Uday said Friday, August 23, 2002 that "The Iranians set up the Islamic group called Jund al-Islam (Soldiers of Islam) which has not the slightest connection with Islam but equally has no link with the al-Qaeda network," Uday told his Youth T.V.’s network.   

"It's a straightforward Iranian trick. The Iranians know perfectly well that Kurdistan is a Sunni Muslim region and the idea of transforming it into a Shiite area is completely out of the question, so they must find another game to play," he said.

Uday's comments came after Kurdish rebel leader Jalal Talabani hinted earlier this week that Baghdad might have links with a group of former Arab volunteers from the war in Afghanistan who found refuge with a small rival faction, the Islamic Movement of Iraqi Kurdistan (IMIK).

In another development, Iraqi Trade Minister Mohammed Mehdi Saleh said his country and NATO member Turkey, a key Muslim ally of the United States, have agreed to seal a long-term cooperation pact similar to a deal discussed between Baghdad and Moscow.

"This proposal was accepted in principle. Work between the two sides will begin over the details afterwards," Saleh said after a meeting with Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit in Ankara.

He said the deal will include cooperation in developing oil and natural gas resources in Iraq.

Turkey has also warned that the territorial integrity of its neighbor Iraq should be preserved and warned breakaway Kurdish groups against moves towards independence.

Much to the discontent of Washington, Russia earlier this week confirmed it was close to sealing an economic cooperation pact with Iraq, valued by some at up to 40 billion dollars (euros).

On the other hand, the U.S. military said in a statement that an Iraqi missile guidance radar system targeted coalition aircraft in the northern no-fly zone.

"Coalition aircraft responded to the Iraqi attacks by firing on the radar site," it said.

The no-fly zone over northern Iraq, imposed after the Gulf War, is enforced by U.S. and British aircraft operating from Incirlik Air Base in Turkey.

In Bahrain, official media said that Foreign Minister of Qatar, the Gulf state seen as the most likely launch pad for any U.S. attack on Iraq, is to visit Baghdad next week.

Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem Al-Thani will travel to the Iraqi capital Monday, August 26, 2002, the Qatar News Agency said, without giving any details of the reason or agenda for his visit.

Iraqi parliamentary speaker Saadun Hammadi also invited his Arab counterparts set to attend the September 1 gathering of the Arab Parliamentary Union in Baghdad to denounce U.S. plans to strike Iraq.
 

 

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