The Oklahoman

Iraq offers to mediate in crisis between Iran, US

- By Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Nasser Karimi

BAGHDAD—Iraq offered Sunday to mediate in the crisis between its two key allies, the United States and Iran, amid escalating Middle East tensions and as Tehran's nuclear deal with world powers steadily unravels.

Iraqi foreign minister, Mohammed al - Hakim, made the offer during a joint news conference in Baghdad with visiting Iranian counterpar­t Mohammad Javad Zarif.

“We are trying to help and to be mediators ,” said al-Ha kim, adding that Baghdad “will work to reach a satisfacto­ry solution” while stressing that Iraq stands against unilateral steps taken by Washington.

In recent weeks, tensions between Washington and Tehran soared over America deploying an aircraft carrier and B-52 bombers to the Persian Gulf over a still- unexplaine­d threat it perceives from Tehran. The U.S. also plans to send 900 additional troops to the 600 already in the Mideast and extending their stay.

The crisis takes root in President Donald Trump's withdrawal last year of America from the 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers that capped Iran's uranium enrichment activities in return to lifting sanctions. Washington subsequent­ly re-imposed sanctions on Iran, sending its economy into freefall.

Trump has argued that the deal failed to sufficient­ly curb Iran's ability to develop nuclear weapons or halt its support for militias throughout the Middle East that the U.S. says destabiliz­e the region, as well as address the issue of Tehran's missiles, which can reach both U.S. regional bases and Israel.

Zarif, who was been on a whirlwind diplomatic offensive to preserve the rest of the accord, insisted that I ran “did not violate the nuclear deal” and urged European nations to exert efforts to preserve the deal following the U.S. pullout.

Speaking about the rising tensions with the U.S., Zarif said Iran will be able to “face the war, whether it is economic or military through steadfastn­ess and its forces.” He also urged for a non-aggression agreement between I ran and Arab countries in the Gulf.

The Shiite-majority Iraq has been trying to maintain a fine line as allies Tehran and Washington descended into verbal vitriol. The country also lies on the fault line between Shiite Iran and the mostly Sunni Arab world, led by power house Saudi Arabia, and has long been a battlefiel­d in which the Saudi-Iran rival ry for regional supremacy played out.

The mediation offer by al-Hakim, Iraq's foreign minister, echoed one made Saturday by Mohamad al-Halbousi, the Iraqi parliament speaker. Al-Hakim also expressed concern for Iran's spiraling economy.

Iranians makeup the bulk of millions of Shiites from around the world who come to Iraq every year to visit its many Shiite shrines and holy places and their purchasing power has slumped after Trump reimposed the sanctions.

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