Former
Officials
Say Iran
Helped On
al-Qaida
By BARRY
SCHWEID
08/10/08
" -- -
WASHINGTON
(AP) — In an
effort to
help the
United
States
counter al-Qaida
after the
9/11 attack,
Iran rounded
up hundreds
of Arabs who
had crossed
the border
from
Afghanistan,
expelled
many of them
and made
copies of
nearly 300
of their
passports, a
former Bush
administration
official
said
Tuesday.
The copies
were sent to
Kofi Annan,
the U.N.
secretary-general,
who passed
them on to
the United
States,
while U.S.
interrogators
were given a
chance by
Iran to
question
some of the
detainees,
Hillary Mann
Leverett
said in an
Associated
Press
interview.
Leverett,
who said she
negotiated
with Iran
for the Bush
administration
in the
2001-3
period, said
Iran sought
a broader
relationship
with the
United
States.
"They
thought they
had been
helpful on
al-Qaida,
and they
were," she
said.
For one
thing, she
said,
suspected
al-Qaida
operatives
were not
given
sanctuary in
Iran.
Some
administration
officials
took the
view,
however,
that Iran
had not
acknowledged
all likely
al-Qaida
members nor
provided
access to
them,
Leverett
said.
Many of the
expelled
Arabs were
deported to
Saudi Arabia
and to other
Arab and
Muslim
countries,
even though
Iran had
poor
relations
with the
Saudi
monarchy and
some other
countries in
the region,
Leverett
said.
James F.
Dobbins, the
Bush
administration's
chief
negotiator
on
Afghanistan
in late
2001, said
that Iran
was
"comprehensively
helpful" in
the
aftermath of
the 9/11
attack in
working to
overthrow
the Taliban
and
collaborating
with the
United
States in
installing
the Karzai
government
in Kabul.
Iranian
diplomats
made clear
at the time
they were
looking for
broader
cooperation
with the
United
States, but
the Bush
administration
was not
interested,
the author
of "After
the Taliban:
Nation-Building
in
Afghanistan,"
said in a
separate
interview.
The Bush
administration
has
acknowledged
contacts
with Iran
over the
years even
while
denouncing
Iran as part
of an "axis
of evil" and
declining to
consider a
resumption
of
diplomatic
relations.
"It isn't
something
that is
talked
about,"
Leverett
said in
describing
Iran's role
during a
forum at the
New America
Foundation,
a
nonpartisan
policy
institute.
Leverett and
her husband,
Flynt
Leverett, a
former
career CIA
analyst and
a former
National
Security
Council
official,
jointly
proposed the
next U.S.
president
seek a
"grand
bargain"
with Iran to
settle all
major
outstanding
differences.
"The next
president
needs to
reorient
U.S. policy
toward Iran
as
fundamentally
as President
Nixon did
with China
in the
1970s,"
Flynt
Leverett
said.
Among the
provisions:
The United
States would
clarify that
it is not
seeking
change in
the nature
of the
Iranian
regime but
rather in
its
policies,
while Iran
would agree
to "certain
limits" on
its nuclear
program.
Iran
considers
most of its
neighbors as
enemies.
Among its
incentives
for
improving
U.S.
relations is
that they
feel that
Pakistan and
Saudi Arabia
would be
less
provocative,
the
Leveretts
said.
Copyright ©
2008 The
Associated
Press.