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Iranian Ambassador: No Deal On Captured U.S. Hikers

REBECCA SANTANA   05/31/10 09:45 PM ET   AP

Iran Hikers Exchange

BAGHDAD — The Iranian ambassador in Baghdad said the recent release of two Iranians from Iraqi custody is not an indication of any impending deal to free three Americans held by Tehran on spying charges.

Ambassador Hassan Kazemi Qomi told The Associated Press the fate of the Americans, who have been held since July, is in the hands of the Iranian judiciary and has no connection to the release of two Iranians earlier this month.

"There were no deals," Qomi said. "They (Americans) are in the custody of the judiciary system."

The detained Americans – Sarah Shourd, 31; her boyfriend, Shane Bauer, 27; and their friend Josh Fattal, 27 – were arrested along the Iraqi border. Iran has accused them of espionage, but their families say the three were hiking in northern Iraq's mountainous Kurdish region and if they strayed into Iran, it was unintentional.

In a goodwill gesture by Iran, their mothers were allowed to visit them earlier in May – for the first time since they were taken into Iranian custody.

The visit, along with the release by Baghdad of two Iranians held for years in U.S. and later Iraqi custody, raised the possibility of a behind-the-scenes swap for the Americans' freedom. The option came into focus especially after Iranian leaders suggested a link between the American trio and a number of Iranians held by the U.S. who Tehran would like to see released.

During an interview with The AP at the Iranian embassy in Baghdad late Sunday, Qomi discussed the case of the three Americans.

"The families came and visited them," he said. "The judiciary system has a fair position on this matter. We hope that their issue will be solved."

The Americans' detention comes at an increasingly tense period between Iran and the West, concerned over Iran's refusal to stop its controversial uranium enrichment that the U.S. and its allies fear masks a push to make nuclear weapons. The U.N. is weighing a new set of sanctions against Iran over the program, which Tehran maintains is only peaceful.

The U.S. has also often accused Tehran of meddling in Iraq, particularly by financing Shiite militias that frequently attacked American troops here.

But Qomi said the U.S. has not offered proof of Iranian interference. He said Tehran wants to see Iraq remain stable, so that American troops can go home under the Obama administration timetable.

An unstable Iraq would give "an excuse to the forces that occupied Iraq to stay," he said, referring to American soldiers. He added that it would also make Iraq a "base for terrorism." Reconstruction work is still going on at the embassy after an April bombing outside the mission's gates.

Iraq has been three months without a new government following the inconclusive March parliamentary elections in which the Sunni-backed Iraqiya alliance narrowly beat a bloc headed by Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Both sides failed to get a majority to govern alone, setting off weeks of frantic negotiations with other political groups to form the next government.

Iran, which like Iraq is predominantly Shiite, is believed to have heavily supported a union of al-Maliki's State of Law and the traditionally Iranian-backed Iraqi National Alliance. That alliance is only four seats short of the needed majority but arguments over who should be its pick for prime minister has raised doubts about its viability.

Qomi said the political wrangling was Iraq's "internal matter" but that Iran would like to see the next Iraqi government include all groups that did well in the elections, including prominent Sunni figures on Iraqiya's list, led by secular Shiite Ayad Allawi.

Meanwhile, six people were killed and about two dozen were wounded in separate attacks in Iraq, police and hospital officials said Monday. Among the dead was a prominent local leader of anti-insurgent Sunni forces known as Awakening Councils who was shot in Baghdad.

A policeman in Baghdad and another in the northern city of Kirkuk were also killed by roadside bombs. An Iraqi soldier in the northern city of Mosul died from wounds sustained in a car bomb blast, while gunmen killed two policemen in a drive-by shooting at a checkpoint in the city.

Iraq also announced the arrest of two alleged al-Qaida militants.

A spokesman for Baghdad operations command, Qassim al-Moussawi, identified one of them as Abbas Nejim Abdullah al-Jawari, who was detained April 16 in western Baghdad and suspected in attacks against embassies and hotels. The second was Mohammed Nouri Mutar Yaseen, described as the head of a Baghdad hit squad and arrested May 1. Al-Moussawi said he was involved in attacks against government ministries, embassies and hotels but did not provide specifics.

A string of April bombings targeting mostly embassies, including Iran's, killed at least 42 people and in January, attacks on hotels in Baghdad left 37 dead.

__

Associated Press Writers Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Sinan Salaheddin contributed to this report.

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12:31 PM on 06/01/2010
If Iranians were caught sneaking into the US they'd be water tortured, sexually abused and forced to confess.
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Ragnar Danneskjold
Defender of Liberty
10:09 AM on 06/01/2010
I hope these kids get back soon and learn and teach themselves and others not to go hiking in the Middle East unless you are either a camel or a native.
07:42 AM on 06/01/2010
I love Hiking; I have predominantly hiked in the Rockies and the Adirondacks; my question to these Hikers is: with all the places in the world to Hike, why would you select the hostile area between Iraq and Iran to go Hiking?
09:19 AM on 06/01/2010
That area, where they were apprehended, is a very pleasant place that many people in the region visit for hiking, picnics, and just to spend a day in nature.
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tbone99
cruisin' duality
09:28 AM on 06/01/2010
They flew across the world for a picnic?
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09:30 AM on 06/01/2010
It's also a dangerous place for Americans to be. There are plenty of beautiful places in the world to go hiking that are not near political hot spots where your chance of becoming a pawn don't exist. Now the US is put in a position to get jerked around by the Iranian government.
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valhalladad
Justice went out of style too soon
10:27 AM on 06/01/2010
If the goal is to enjoy a couple of days in the mountain air, it makes no sense. If the goal is to get arrested for anti-Iranian propaganda when your countries are ramping up to war, it makes perfect sense.
One good point though, it appears that Iran hasn't seen fit to build a Guantanemo yet.
02:00 PM on 07/18/2010
Why does it make no sense? They live and work in nearby Damascus, have for a few years. Friends recommended the popular nature trails and lakes. They had a few days off and went.
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Steven Rau
04:16 AM on 06/01/2010
The "Axis Of Evil" backpacking tour. Next year North Korea...
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Vince Weiguang Li
Alferd Packer-Epicurean Go Go Greyhound!
03:34 AM on 06/01/2010
Given the hikers' backgrounds it is entirely possible that they were attempting to enter Iran on some sort of film-news deal. The hotel manager warned them not to go to the border, and they did it anyway.

Shane Bauer, a 2007 honors graduate in peace and conflict studies, has been working in North Africa and the Middle East, using his fluency in Arabic, the language he minored in at UC Berkeley. He recently has produced stories on Iraq and Syria for San Francisco-based New American Media.

Joshua Felix Fattal, 27, attended UC Berkeley for three semesters, from fall 2003 through fall 2004, graduating in December 2004 with a B.S. in environmental economics and policy from the College of Natural Resources.

Sarah Emily Shourd, 30, transferred from Diablo Valley College to UC Berkeley in the fall of 2000 and graduated in May 2003 with a B.A. in English. An aspiring journalist, she reported a story earlier this year for New American Media on the Golan Heights in Israel.

Bauer has many stories on the net of his wanderings around war torn Iraq, including Falluja.

Sound like a bunch of happy wanders on a backpacking spree? Nope! They were definitely out for a story, or wanted to become the center of a hostage swap. Which is exactly what will be needed to get their sorry asses back, we will need to give up several killer terrorists to get them back, just like the French 3 weeks ago.
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Steven Rau
04:12 AM on 06/01/2010
Excellent input, thanks.
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09:32 AM on 06/01/2010
In that case they can have a nice book/movie deal about their decade in an Iranian prison.
03:32 AM on 06/01/2010
What the US media is not reporting is that they were caught with their backpacks full of cash. I mean, what "hikers" run around the iraqi-iranian border with backpacks full of cash??
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Silent Edge
06:03 AM on 06/01/2010
Maybe they wanted to make sure buying water wasn't an issue?
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valhalladad
Justice went out of style too soon
10:28 AM on 06/01/2010
"...what "hikers" run around the iraqi-iranian border with backpacks full of cash?? "

The CIA?
03:20 AM on 06/01/2010
First question, forget Iran, who goes backpacking in IRAQ?!?

Second question, shouldn't there be people with binoculars and guns positioned along the border trying to keep the bad guys out and the good guys in? Didn't we read about infiltration from Iran? What do those border-watchers do when they see a threesome of happy-go-lucky backpackers going the WRONG WAY across the border???

Something is obviously peculiar, but the propaganda machine wants us to think this was no more out of line than had Michael Palin's bicycle trip through North Cornwall gone a wee bit astray.
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Vince Weiguang Li
Alferd Packer-Epicurean Go Go Greyhound!
03:39 AM on 06/01/2010
Backpacking over the border in Iran.

Iranians say they are spies. Given their backgrounds they may just have wanted to get captured to be in the middle of a big story or to facilitate the release of Iranian terrorists.. that we will need to swap for their sorry butts. I guess they didnt plan on being left for good. Unlike the journalists that entered N Korea illegally that Clinton and Gore went and got back, they are moldering and may be forgotten.
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Selmer1
Artist Musician Secular European American
03:40 AM on 06/01/2010
Fantastic observation, thank you Max T. Fanned! My thoughts and sentiments exactly. Nothing
like a nice, long hike in a war-torn country's border, few feet from the territory of my government's
#1 enemy. It makes perfect sense... - if you are a CRET!N!
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
02:59 AM on 06/01/2010
I think it is highly unlikely they were in Iran by accident. Possibly they were spies - albiet inept - as Iran claims. More likely they were thrill seekers and wanted a good bar story when they got home - 'Hey, let me tell you about the time I went hiking in Iran'.
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Vince Weiguang Li
Alferd Packer-Epicurean Go Go Greyhound!
03:42 AM on 06/01/2010
No they are indy journalists, that screwed up. Bauer had been running around Iraq during the war filing stories for a little known website. Maybe, just maybe, they wanted to become the story.

Sometimes you have to be careful what you wish for, you might just get it. I am sure that they are enjoying the political prison wing of the Iranian Midnight Express Jail.
06:32 AM on 06/01/2010
All of which is a nice cover for spies.....
02:49 PM on 06/01/2010
Very interesting comments by Vince. Neither innocently hiking nor credible spies. Isn't it typical that it's probably just a media ploy. Can you say dumb asses? Evian is not a pleasant place to be. Not sure that I really feel sorry for them. Treatment they are getting is infinitely better than what Iranians experience for sure.
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
04:53 PM on 06/01/2010
You know I got about 1 kilometer from the Iranian border and the driver said he knew people at the checkpoint and could get me in for 50 euro. I really considered a cup of tea and an Iranian stamp in my passport, then decided the risk wasn't worth it.
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yoyodyne666
is it friday yet?
02:41 AM on 06/01/2010
"The U.S. has also often accused Tehran of meddling in Iraq ...." bwahahahahaha and what exactly is the U.S. doing in iraq, meddling?
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09:35 AM on 06/01/2010
Of course they're meddling. It's a perfect scenario for them to tie up US resources and increase their power in the region. Of course these little tidbits were/are conveniently ignored by the GOP and their supporters who should have considered this prior to invading.
02:32 AM on 06/01/2010
They wanted an adveture and now they're having an adventure. And hey, another couple of months they'll be able to write a book on it. I bet their parents have already been contacted by book agents.
01:57 AM on 06/01/2010
The U.S. has also often accused Tehran of meddling in Iraq,

The height of arrogance. Hubris is poison, America. . . as you are finding out.
02:19 AM on 06/01/2010
how so?
03:17 AM on 06/01/2010
Witness to the resistance to having a US flag on every street corner in the world. Step out side the US and see it.
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N8tracks
I'm a workaholic
01:40 AM on 06/01/2010
What a load of BS. If you're "hiking" in Iran... you're a spy.
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Silent Edge
06:05 AM on 06/01/2010
Might be the makings of a spin-off for Jeff Foxworthy's new sitcom.
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tbone99
cruisin' duality
01:02 AM on 06/01/2010
With McChrystal and Israel pushing for an attack on Iran those hikers may be one of the few things that would stay our hand.
Iran would be foolish to give up one of their few winning cards.
The U.S has blatantly stated it commited billions to destabilze iran from inside the country- there is no reason for Iran not defend itself however it can with whatever it takes.
12:56 AM on 06/01/2010
I hope they do let them go or the US government can work out a deal-- but really? That was your idea of a vacation spot?

Also, I doubt they were spies-- real spies wouldn't get caught that easily (at least I'd hope!)
06:33 AM on 06/01/2010
It happens.
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tbone99
cruisin' duality
09:27 AM on 06/01/2010
But agent provacateurs would- with the intention of causing an international incident.
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TheOuroborus
It's NOT paranoia if they really R out to get U.
12:40 AM on 06/01/2010
Honestly, I have no sympathy for them. They probably ARE spies. And if not, they're complete morons.
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Silent Edge
06:05 AM on 06/01/2010
Yeah, exactly how far would you need to travel to realize you're not where you're supposed to be? These people aren't too bright.
06:37 AM on 06/01/2010
Or.....they were exactly where they were told to go, but just got caught