Baghdad - A senior US diplomat said the United States had shown "arrogance"
and "stupidity" in Iraq but was now ready to talk with any group except Al-Qaida
in Iraq to facilitate national reconciliation.
In an interview with Al-Jazeera television aired late Saturday, Alberto
Fernandez, director of public diplomacy in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs at
the State Department offered an unusually candid assessment of America's war in
Iraq.
"We tried to do our best but I think there is much room for criticism
because, undoubtedly, there was arrogance and there was stupidity from the
United States in Iraq," he said.
"We are open to dialogue because we all know that, at the end of the day, the
solution to the hell and the killings in Iraq is linked to an effective Iraqi
national reconciliation," he said, speaking in Arabic from Washington. "The
Iraqi government is convinced of this."
The question of negotiations between the United States and insurgency
factions has repeatedly surfaced over the past two years, but details have been
sketchy. One issue that was often raised in connection with such negotiations
was the extent of amnesty the United States and its Iraqi allies were willing to
offer to the insurgents if they disarmed and joined the political process.
Fernandez spoke to the Qatar-based Al-Jazeera after a man claiming to speak
for Saddam Hussein's outlawed Baath Party told the network the United States was
seeking a face-saving exodus from Iraq and that insurgents were ready to
negotiate but won't lay down arms.
"Abu Mohammed", a pseudonym for the man, appeared to set near impossible
conditions for the start of any talks with the Americans, including the return
to service of Saddam's armed forces, the annulment of every law adopted since
Saddam's ouster, the recognition of insurgent groups as the sole representatives
of the Iraqi people and a timetable for a gradual, unconditional withdrawal of
US and other foreign troops in Iraq.
"The occupier has started to search for a face-saving way out. The
resistance, with all its factions, is determined to continue fighting until the
enemy is brought down to his knees and sits on the negotiating table or is
dealt, with God's help, a humiliating defeat," he said. The man wore a suit and
appeared to be in his 40s but his face was concealed.
"There is an element of the farcical in that statement," Fernandez said of
Abu Mohammed's comments. "They are very removed from reality."
Still Fernandez warned that failure to pacify the widening sectarian strife
in Iraq as well as an enduring insurgency would damage the entire Middle East.
"We are witnessing failure in Iraq and that's not the failure of the United
States alone but it is a disaster for the region. Failure in Iraq will be a
failure for the United States but a disaster for the region."
Although the actual identity of Abu Mohammed remains unknown, the interview
adds to growing indications that Iraq's Sunni insurgents sense the tide may be
turning against the United States and the Iraqi government it backs.
Fernandez's comments, on the other hand, join a series of sobering remarks by
President Bush and the US military in recent days.
Bush this week conceded that "right now it's tough" for US forces in Iraq and
on Saturday met with his top military and security advisers to study new tactics
to curb the staggering violence in Iraq. Three US Marines were killed also
Saturday, making October the deadliest month for American forces in Iraq this
year.
US military spokesman Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell said attacks in Baghdad
were up 22 percent in the first three weeks of the holy Muslim month of Ramadan
despite a two-month old US-Iraqi drive to crush violence in the Iraqi capital.
On Wednesday, and again on Friday, Sunni insurgents believed to belong to
al-Qaida in Iraq, staged military-like parades in the heart of five towns in the
vast and mainly desert province of Anbar, including the provincial capital
Ramadi. Some of these parades, in which hooded gunmen paraded with their
weapons, took place within striking distance of US forces stationed in nearby
bases.
The parades proved to be a propaganda success, with TV footage of Wednesday's
parade shown in many parts of the world, a likely embarrassment for the US
military as well as the embattled Iraqi government.