BAGHDAD - As French President NicolasBAGHDAD - As French President Nicolas Sarkozy was returning home
from a two-week holiday in the United States, his Foreign Minister was
arriving in Baghdad.
If Sarkozy's American vacation, with its
boat ride with US President George W. Bush, was an indication of a new
direction for French-American relations, Bernard Kouchner's trip to
Iraq signalled a new French approach to US foreign policy. Kouchner
is the first top French official to visit Iraq since the beginning of
the US-led war in 2003, which France vigorously opposed, causing a
bitter division between the countries. Kouchner, invited to
Baghdad by Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, told a news conference he
was on a listening visit and had not come to present any diplomatic
initiative. "I want to listen to the people ... We have to
understand this country, we have to understand what's going on between
the Shiites and the Sunnis, not only in Iraq," he said. Kouchner
told the joint news conference with Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar
Zebari that there was no military solution in Iraq and there had to be
a political one.
"Now we have to face the reality, including the American view ...
but this is an Iraqi problem and it must be solved by the Iraqis,"
Kouchner said. Kouchner said he would meet representatives of all
of Iraq's different communities and members of the Government over the
next two days. Kouchner's visit comes amid talks between Iraq's
political leaders to try to revive national reconciliation efforts and
repair the fractured unity Government. Prime Minister Nouri
Maliki is under growing pressure from Washington, which is frustrated
by negligible political progress while its troops step up operations to
quell sectarian violence. Former French President Jacques Chirac and
his then foreign minister Dominique de Villepin were at the forefront
of international opposition to the US-led war.
Sarkozy, elected in May, has sought to improve relations, saying he
wanted France to be a friend of the United States. He paid an informal
visit to the Bush family estate during his US holiday where they
chatted over burgers and hotdogs. A White House spokesman welcomed Kouchner's visit. "This
is one more example ... of a growing international desire to help Iraq
become a stable and secure country," spokesman Gordon Johndroe said. Kouchner's
appointment after Sarkozy's election in May was seen as significant for
relations with the United States and with Iraq where France has no
troops but has kept an embassy.
Source of information: http://wn.com
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