From
a couple of days ago.
It is clear where the support for this operation is coming from.
Maliki:
Saudi and Qatar at war against Iraq
Iraqi
prime minister accuses Riyadh and Doha of declaring war against his
country in rare direct attack on Gulf states.
9
March, 2014
Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki has accused Saudi Arabia and Qatar of
supporting fighters in Iraq and effectively declaring war on the
country.
The
rare direct attack on the Sunni Gulf powers, comes with Iraq
embroiled in its worst prolonged period of bloodshed since 2008, with
more than 1,800 people killed already this year, ahead of
parliamentary elections due next month.
The
bloodletting in the country, which shares a long border with Saudi
Arabia, has been driven principally by widespread discontent among
the country's Sunni Arab minority and by the civil war in
neighbouring Syria.
Maliki,
a Shia, has in the past blamed unnamed regional countries and
neighbours for destabilising Iraq, the AFP news agency reported.
But
in an interview with France 24 broadcast on Saturday, the Iraqi
premier said allegations he was marginalising Sunnis were being
pushed by sectarians with ties to foreign agendas, with Saudi and
Qatari incitement.
"They
are attacking Iraq, through Syria and in a direct way, and they
announced war on Iraq, as they announced it on Syria, and
unfortunately it is on a sectarian and political basis," he
said.
"These
two countries are primarily responsible for the sectarian and
terrorist and security crisis of Iraq."
Saudi
Arabia and Qatar have emerged as regional rivals because, while both
have provided support to fighters opposed to embattled Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad, the two countries have also sparred in
recent weeks over Doha's support for the Muslim Brotherhood of
deposed Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi.
Saudi
Arabia, along with Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, withdrew its
ambassador to Qatar this month.
Baghdad
has long complained that support for groups fighting in Syria's civil
war finds its way through to Iraq with weapons in particular ending
up in the hands of armed groups.
Maliki
said in the interview that Riyadh and Doha were providing political,
financial and media support to fighters and accused them of buying
weapons for the benefit of these organisations.
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