CIA meets with Iraqi Kurds in Germany

pms laflame at aaahawk.com
Mon Apr 22 22:44:16 PDT 2002


ODJ Iraqi Kurds Debate Plans With US Officials To Oust Saddam

-- Repeating story from earlier

CAIRO (AP)--Leaders of the two main Kurdish parties that control northern Iraq met with U.S. administration officials last week to co-ordinate efforts to remove Saddam Hussein from power, according to Iraqi dissidents and Arab press.

Masoud Barzani, leader of the Kurdish Democratic Party, and Jalal Talabani, leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, also discussed plans for a government that will replace Saddam's regime once the Iraqi leader is ousted, said the Iraqi dissidents.

Officially, the Kurdish groups - the only armed Iraqi opposition groups - have said nothing about the meeting, perhaps out of fear of being accused by other Iraqi factions of working unilaterally with the U.S.

On Sunday the London-based Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper reported that both Barzani and Talabani met officials from the Pentagon, the State Department and the CIA in Germany last week.

Quoting a Kurdish source the paper said both sides met for three days near Berlin and reviewed co-ordination "to launch a strike against Saddam most likely by the end of this year."

The Iraqi dissidents said Barzani and Talabani also discussed with U.S. officials plans for merging their two administrations controllingnorthern Iraq ahead of a possible move against Saddam.

Asked about the meeting, a spokeswoman at the U.S. Embassy in Berlin said the U.S. never comments on intelligence matters.

German Foreign Ministry spokesman Andreas Michaelis confirmed that the two Kurdish leaders were in Germany last week but refused to provide further information.

"The Foreign Ministry was informed that the persons would be staying here. We're providing no information on the nature of possible talks or contact partners," Michaelis said.

But Delshad Miran, a spokesman for the KDP in London, and Fouad Massoum, the U.K.-based PUK's Europe's representative, said their two leaders are in Europe but declined to divulge more.

If confirmed, it would be the first meeting between the two leaders since their parties fought a bloody war over control of the Kurdish area in 1994. The U.S., which imposes a no-fly zone on the enclave to protect Kurds against Saddam's incursion, has been mediating between the two parties.

Such a meeting would be a strong signal to Saddam that U.S. President George W. Bush's administration is determined in its efforts to remove him from power. The 1995 Iraq Liberation Act, passed by the U.S. Congress and signed by then-President Bill Clinton, made it a matter of law that the U.S. supports "regime change," or the ouster of Saddam. Bush has recently reiterated that that is the U.S. goal.

(END) Dow Jones Newswires 22-04-02



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