Maliki: 'Diabolical' Arab Countries behind Iraq Strife

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki blamed "diabolical" and "treacherous" Arab countries for a protracted surge in nationwide violence in a speech on Sunday, but stopped short of naming individual countries.

The premier said suicide bombers were coming to Iraq from as far afield as Morocco, Libya and Yemen, but did not single out countries he described as "evil" which he said were supporting violent extremists in Iraq.

"Iraq is the target for some countries that are backing terrorism, and backing evil," Maliki said in a speech in the southern city of Nasiriyah.

"The world has united with us," he continued. "The (U.N.) Security Council, the European Union, and most Arab countries, except some diabolical treacherous countries."

The Iraqi leader warned countries that supported violence in Iraq would also suffer, arguing "this evil has started to expand, and it will reach those same countries, as it reached others previously."

Iraqi officials have alleged that Saudi Arabia and Qatar in particular have supported disaffected Sunni Arabs in western Iraq as they have staged anti-government protests in the past year.

More recently, Sunni-dominated western Iraq has erupted into a deadly standoff with security forces and their tribal allies facing off against anti-government militants and tribes.

A large section of Ramadi and all of Fallujah, both former insurgent bastions west of Baghdad, fell from government control late last month.

It was the first time anti-government fighters have exercised such open control in major cities since the height of the insurgency that followed the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.

Fighting originally erupted in the Ramadi area on December 30, when security forces cleared a year-old Sunni Arab protest camp.

It spread to Fallujah, and militants moved in and seized the city and parts of Ramadi after security forces withdrew.

Diplomats including U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon have urged Iraqi authorities to pursue political reconciliation in a bid to end the standoff, and a months-long surge in nationwide violence, but Maliki has said the unrest is not due to domestic factors, and has blamed outside forces.

Comments 9
Thumb joker37 19 January 2014, 17:00

Sectarian slurs are the norm with this pathetic bigot poster.

Thumb cedre 19 January 2014, 17:29

thats probably why my avatar is a shia from bekaa, coz I'm a sunni pathetic bigot poster...

Thumb joker37 19 January 2014, 18:04

@cedre: nowhere did i mention that you were "sunni" , thats also part of your sectarian perceptions

Thumb cedre 19 January 2014, 20:34

joker, u cant be selectively sectarian, if u hate shias per se, u dont quote them as references(tufayli,saqr and all anti HA shias), put a shia as ur avatar or have an Iraqi shia as GP...

Thumb cedre 19 January 2014, 17:35

apparently maliki has same military success as his alawite mate, fightings now reached the green zone in baghdad...

Thumb proudm14. 19 January 2014, 19:32

"No one is attacking a certain sect nor mentioning any!"

kazzebeen o bit dalkon kazzebeen

100,000 dead syrian ya southern

Thumb cedre 19 January 2014, 20:11

hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh a khomeynist calling others sectarian.
I know ur stupid farsi rhetoric inside out. U say u're fighting extremism then accusing all sunnis of extremism, from fsa to liberal hariris. So lets list how u fight : lebanese that oppose HA, syrian people opposed to genocide/gazing by bashar, sunnis resisting maliki,saudis,...etc In a word : SUNNIS.
Grow up some balls, stop ur qomi taqiya and say it loud and clear like ur mullah Nassy, u're a khomeynist soldier fighting for wilayat faqih and shia/farsi domination of the gulf and the levant...

Thumb chrisrushlau 19 January 2014, 20:15

Are the king of Saudi Arabia and his brother monarchs financing the war against the Iraqi government like they are financing the war against the Syrian government and the war against the Egyptian government (President Morsi)?
Let's stick to the point here.

Thumb chrisrushlau 19 January 2014, 20:34

Only in Lebanon would such a ridiculous argument take place. And all because you are all so dependent on European good-will: the very people who destroyed your way of life. I see a photo of Lebanese soldiers and what do I see: a bunch of men whose only training and only concern is whether their berets look good and European.

It's an addiction, wanting someone to respect you whom you don't respect. It's called the "battered woman syndrome".