US says Iran has a role in Afghan talks

ROME (Reuters) – The United States recognises that Iran has a role to play in resolving the Afghan conflict, US envoy Richard Holbrooke said yesterday, as Tehran joined talks with a high-level group on Afghanistan for the first time.

An Iranian representative joined a meeting in Rome of almost 50 officials from the international contact group on Afghanistan to discuss progress in the transfer of security responsibility to Afghan forces.

“The story here is very simple. This is the first time the Iranians have attended this meeting,” Holbrooke told a news conference, adding that Washington saw no objection to the presence of its long-time foe at the talks.

“We were asked whether we had any problems with that and we said ‘No,’“ Holbrooke, the US special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, told a news conference.

“We recognise that Iran, with its long, almost completely open border with Afghanistan and with a huge drug problem … has a role to play in the peaceful settlement of this situation in Afghanistan. So for the United States there is no problem with their presence.”

The United States has periodically accused Iran of helping insurgents in Afghanistan. Tehran denies supporting militant groups there and blames the instability on the presence of Western troops.

Iranian special representative Mohammed Ali Qanezadeh said yesterday the main problems in the region were insecurity, drug trafficking and the presence of foreign forces, but he said the talks in Rome had been “fruitful”.

Asked what kind of solution was likely to have the best chance of success, he said: “I think regional, but that regional solution should be supported by the international community.”

Mainly Shi’ite Muslim Iran was strongly opposed to the strict Sunni Taliban when they ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. Tehran now has growing economic influence in the country, especially in western Afghanistan via cross-border trade. Holbrooke said the talks between the two sides at yesterday’s meeting did not extend to issues beyond Afghanistan.

“What we are discussing here is not affected by, nor will it affect, the bilateral issues that are discussed elsewhere concerning Iran,” he said.
The United States fears Iran’s civilian nuclear energy programme is a cover for producing weapons. Tehran denies it is developing nuclear arms and said it needs nuclear fuel-making technology to generate electricity.

Separately, Holbrooke sought to play down any suggestion that a NATO summit in Lisbon next month would specify areas that could be handed over to Afghan control in coming months.