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Iraq
Iranian Diplomat Kidnapped in Baghdad
2007-02-06
It's like, karma, man.
BAGHDAD, Tuesday, Feb. 6 — An Iranian diplomat was abducted Sunday evening when his convoy was stopped by men with official Defense Ministry identification in the Karrada neighborhood here, senior Iraqi and American officials said Monday.

Iraqi security forces captured several suspects after pursuing their vehicles through the streets of Baghdad, two of the Iraqi officials said. The vehicle with the diplomat was not caught, though.

The abduction of the Iranian took place in a largely Shiite section of the city not far from where a truck bomb killed at least 135 people on Saturday and where residents have complained that the slow pace of the increase in American troops has left them open to attacks.

The men captured in the chase by Iraqi forces on Sunday were Iraqis with Defense Ministry identification, Iraqi and American officials said, raising serious questions about whether government forces themselves were involved in the abduction. A senior Iraqi official said that the credentials initially appeared to be genuine but that investigators later received conflicting information about whether the men had been dismissed from the ministry but somehow kept their identification.

When asked about indications that an Iranian diplomat had been abducted in Baghdad, Mohammad alHosseini, an Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman in Tehran, said: “We need to investigate, because we have been receiving a lot of news like that these days. I cannot confirm it yet.”

If the kidnappersÂ’ credentials turn out to be genuine, there will be enormous pressure on the Iraqi government to recover the diplomat and capture all of those involved. The Iraqi government has been critical of recent raids by American forces in which Iranians working with diplomatic offices in Iraq have been detained.

The Americans have accused some of those Iranians of supporting illicit armed groups in Iraq, but the raids have been embarrassing to the Iraqi government, which has been encouraging foreign diplomatic missions — in particular Iran’s — to increase their presence here. Iraqi officials have distanced themselves from the American raids, while Iran has simply termed those operations kidnappings.

In fact, the American position on those raids was weakened after American forces in Baghdad first announced that they would formally present evidence on illicit Iranian activity in Iraq, then pulled back amid indications that officials in Washington were not persuaded that the case was strong enough.

The Iranian Embassy has not publicly acknowledged the kidnapping. But in an indication of how high tensions between Iran and the United States have risen over the American raids, the embassy privately voiced suspicions that the kidnapping of its diplomat might have been done at the behest of American forces in Baghdad, an Iraqi official said.

Beyond the unsubstantiated suspicions about the involvement of the United States in the kidnapping, there were no clear indications of whether the Iranian diplomat might have been taken by insurgents seeking to cast doubt on the stability of IraqÂ’s government, or simply for ransom.
Posted by:Glenmore

#16  good
Posted by: sinse   2007-02-06 23:52  

#15  Jeez. We're looking and looking and we just can't find them. They must be very well trained.
Wonder who did that?
Posted by: tu3031   2007-02-06 14:51  

#14  Karma is a funny thing...
Posted by: Earl   2007-02-06 11:11  

#13  Gee. Whatta shame.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2007-02-06 10:33  

#12  Gee... I don't even feel bad about it either.
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-02-06 09:39  

#11  I love the smell of schaudenfreude in the morning!!! It smells like... like victory!!
(or at least a little payback.)
Posted by: Sgt. Mom   2007-02-06 08:51  

#10  Can someone please do a press conference, smile and say something to the effect of, "At this time, it appears the abductions were carried out by students."
Posted by: Mike N.   2007-02-06 08:42  

#9  U & me.
Posted by: wxjames   2007-02-06 08:38  

#8  Somebody is paying for four helicopters.
Posted by: john   2007-02-06 08:32  

#7  It must be the JOOOOOS!
Posted by: doc   2007-02-06 08:28  

#6  Why do I have the feeling that the next "fact" reported will be that the kidnappers were wearing American soldier uniforms? Cause you know, it call comes down to American imperialism and torture.

/sarcasm off/
Posted by: Jules   2007-02-06 08:18  

#5  Back neither! Slay them all in equal numbers and WIN!
Posted by: Besoeker   2007-02-06 07:55  

#4  We are caught in a no win situation do we back the shiites and play into Irans hands or back the Sunnis and play into the Saudis hands!!!

Posted by: Ebbolump Glomotle9608   2007-02-06 07:52  

#3  I hope they're measuring his neck for a scimitar as we speak.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2007-02-06 02:44  

#2  What's that smell? Fried schadenfreude? or bittersweet irony?

Heh...
Posted by: Tony (UK)   2007-02-06 02:36  

#1  1st guess, al-Sadr's Tots vs. Hakim Quds Puds.

As per usual the slime junkies at the NYT suborn the purpose of a "news article" and uses them as vehicles for their agendas.

count the slime injections in one article

Posted by: RD   2007-02-06 00:41  

00:00