The administration of US President George W. Bush is conceding for the first time that Washington may not finish a complex security agreement with Iraq before Bush leaves office.
Faced with stiff Iraqi opposition, it is “very possible” the US may have to extend an existing UN mandate, said a senior administration official close to the talks. That would mean major decisions about how US forces operate in Iraq could be left to the next president, including how much authority the US must give Iraqis over military operations and how quickly the handover takes place.
The official said the goal is still to have an agreement by year’s end. And US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker has said he feels no pressure from the US political calendar and that Dec. 31 is “a clear deadline.”
Still, Crocker also said last week: “My focus on this is more on getting it done right than getting it done quick.”
The Bush administration is seeking an agreement with Baghdad that would provide for a normal, permanent US military and diplomatic presence in Iraq. The word “permanent” has been a flashpoint for many who oppose the war, both in the US and Iraq. But the US official said the agreement would not call for permanent US bases on Iraqi soil.
Instead, the proposed agreement would allow US troops or personnel to operate out of US, Iraqi or joint facilities through either short or long-term contracts, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the negotiations are not public.
“The idea that the US will have a normal, diplomatic and military presence, and need access to facilities — not necessarily our facilities, but need facilities — is permanent,” said the official, who is close to the ongoing talks.
Those facilities, the official said, could belong to the Iraqis, and the US would simply be using them on a renewable basis. Or they could be existing US facilities that over time would be taken over by the Iraqis.
US and Iraqi leaders are struggling to negotiate two parallel agreements. One would lay out broad, long-term political, economic and security ties between the US and Iraq, setting up a normal state-to-state relationship.
The second — and decidedly more difficult pact — is the Status of Forces Agreement that would detail the legal basis for the ongoing presence of US military forces operating in Iraq. The agreements would replace a UN mandate that has been in place since the US-led invasion in March 2003 but expires at the end of this year.
The US and Iraq may be able to map out the broader document describing the two countries’ long-term relationship, but may have to extend the current UN mandate because many of the thornier military details will require more time, the US official said.
Iraqi officials have raised a number of objections to the draft documents, both publicly and privately. And they are now suggesting that the latest proposal isn’t even worth submitting to their parliament for approval.
On Monday two Iraqi lawmakers who saw the proposed draft said the document, put forward on Sunday, said it seeks to address some of Iraq’s concerns. It adds an explicit promise that US forces in Iraq will not attack neighboring countries and that Iraqi authorities will be notified in advance of any action by US ground forces, the lawmakers said.
While it gives US forces the power to arrest suspects, it says any detainees would be handed over to Iraqi authorities, said the lawmakers, Mahmoud Othman and Iman al-Asadi.
Hadi al-Amri, head of the Badr Organization, a pro-government Shiite party with close ties to Iran, said the latest draft was still unacceptable and warned that the positions and interests of the two sides are so far apart that any kind of agreement is “impossible.”
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has been meeting with Iranian leaders in Tehran this week, and Iran’s supreme leader voiced strong opposition to the US-Iraqi security pact.
The Iranians fear the deal would solidify US influence in Iraq and give US forces a launching pad for military action against them. Al-Maliki tried to ease Tehran’s concerns, assuring the Iranians that a deal would pose no threat to their security.
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