Irak to Suriah


Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has accused Syria pretended not to know the Sunni insurgents have been using the country as a safe haven.

Iraq put thousands of extra police on the border with Syria this week in response to rain is accused of bombing the guerrillas who protected Damascus.

Al-Maliki said, 90 percent of foreign insurgents into Iraq through Syria, including fighters who he accused of being perpetrators of two bomb attacks outside the ministry in Baghdad that killed nearly 100 people last month.

"There's an emergency troops to the border, to fill the gap," said Major General Tariq Yusuf, provincial police chief of Anbar in western Iraq, which borders Syria, as quoted by Reuters on Saturday (5 / 9). He said al-Maliki himself had ordered the deployment.

According to him, a number of policemen have been placed and the other in the journey. He declined to give further details. "There's accusations against the Syrian government relating to the bomb attacks. They have information that there are threats from Syria," he said.

Thursday, al-Maliki challenged Syria to explain why the country's armed groups that protect the accused as the perpetrators of the bombing of Iraq in the region. Baghdad has asked Damascus handed over two men suspected of masterminding the bombing in the Iraqi capital.

The government is ruled by the Shia in Iraq blamed the Baath party supporters, the party of former president Saddam Hussein, and al-Qaeda for the attacks recently. The government charged that the Baath Party leaders were planning the bombing of Syria.

Iraqi officials, Monday, broadcast a video which they say is the confession of a suspected al Qaeda militants have been trained Yeng expressed by intelligence agencies in the country of Syria. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad stated that allegations of Iraq "immoral" and asked Baghdad to give evidence.

Al-Maliki telah secara resmi minta Dewan Keamanan PBB untuk melancarkan penyelidikan atas pengeboman itu. When talking to the television station Iraqiya, the government owned, in a program that aired Friday, the government spokesman, Ali ad-Dabbagh, said the demand that the investigation did not mention Syria.

"We just want an investigation," he said. "However, we have evidence and confessions." Dabbagh said that his party even obtain logistical support from Syria.

Syria and Iraq for several years ruled by the wings of the Baath Party rivals, who fought Saddam in power after 1979, but their relationship improved, as the defense, in the late 1990s. Tension protruding back after the attack on the U.S. led Iraq in 2003, which drove Iraqi Shi'ites lead.

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