On a historic visit to Iraq, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad
has accused the United States of favouring the emergence of
terrorism in the region since the US-led invasion of Iraq
in 2003. Following his first day of talks in Baghdad with
the Iraqi government, the Iranian leader declared that "six
years ago there were no terrorists in the region, but they
appeared when foreign forces arrived".
He rejected accusations that his country is arming militias
in Iraq: "We want to tell Mr Bush that accusing others
will increase the problems of America in the region and will
not solve them. The Americans have to accept the region as
it is. The Iraqi people do not like America."
In the town of Falluja, some 70 kilometres west of the capital,
several hundred Iraqis opposed to Ahmedinejad's visit chanted
anti-Iran slogans.
He is the first Iranian president to visit Iraq
since Iran's Islamic revolution in 1979.