“We are going to help him and it is in our interest to help him for the sake of peace,” Bush said.
“The first thing that gives me confidence is that he wants responsibility,” Bush said referring to the Iraqi prime minister’s calls for security control over Iraqi provinces to be transferred to Iraqi forces by the earliest date of June 2007.
Not offended
The US president’s show of support came after US officials insisted al-Maliki was not offended by a critical White House memo and had not snubbed Bush in Amman on Wednesday when the two had been expected to meet.
Bush said he and al-Maliki agreed in high-stakes talks that Iraq should not be partitioned into separate, semi-autonomous zones.
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The Iraqi prime minister said his country will never allow any foreign control
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“The prime minster made clear that splitting his country into parts, as some have suggested is not what the Iraqi people want, and that any partition of Iraq would only lead to an increase in sectarian violence,” Bush said after nearly two and a half hours of discussions aimed at stabilising violence-wracked Iraq.
“I agree,” he said.
For his part, al-Maliki denied that Iran had any influence over Iraq or any part of the embattled capital Baghdad.
He also said Iraq will never allow any foreign control of his war-wracked country. “We have repeatedly said, and we reaffirm once more, that we will never allow anyone to control any part of Iraq,” al-Maliki said, when asked about alleged Iranian interference in Iraq.
“There are [foreign] interferences but any talk about [foreign] control is exaggerated.”
Three-way talks cancelled
Original plans for three-way talks were abandoned at the last minute but talks between Bush and al-Maliki went ahead in Jordan.
They met for a working breakfast at the hotel where Bush is staying.