WASHINGTON - The Bush administration has
cut off contact with Iran, and Pentagon officials are pushing for
action they believe could destabilize the government of the Islamic
republic, The Washington Post reported in its Sunday edition.
The move follows intelligence reports suggesting Al-Qaida
operatives in Iran played a role in the May 12 suicide bombings in
Saudi Arabia, according to the newspaper.
Citing
administration officials, the newspaper said the White House
"appears ready to embrace an aggressive policy of trying to
destabilize the Iranian government."
Officials will meet
Tuesday at the White House to discuss the Iran strategy, with
Pentagon officials pressing for action that could lead to the
toppling of the government through a popular uprising, the Post
said.
A White House spokeswoman declined comment on
Saturday.
The United States severed ties with Iran following
the 1979 Islamic revolution. Last year, President Bush branded Iran
as part of an "axis of evil" that was trying to develop banned
nuclear weapons. The United States also has accused Iran of
harboring members of Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaida network, which
Washington blames for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
But since
the U.S. campaign to topple the Taliban regime in Afghanistan,
Iranian and U.S. officials have met from time to time to discuss a
variety of issues.
After this month's suicide bombings in
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, the Bush administration canceled the next
planned meeting, according to the Post.
The newspaper said
"very troubling intercepts" before and after the Saudi Arabia
bombing played a major role in the administration's new stance
toward Iran. The intelligence suggested Al-Qaida operatives in
Iran were involved in the planning of the bombings, which killed 34
people, the Post reported.
On Thursday, the official IRNA
news agency of Iran said U.S. allegation that the Islamic nation
harbored Al-Qaida members were based on faulty intelligence, but
officials vowed to arrest any militants who might have slipped into
the country.
On Saturday, Iran's top diplomat told the
London-based Arabic daily Al-Hayat that Iran sees no need to
immediately revive a dialogue with the United States following talks
on who should govern postwar Iraq.
"This dialogue has
stopped now and we see no reason to revive it for the time being,"
Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi told Al-Hayat.
"We
entered into an honest dialogue with the Americans to create a
government in Iraq that has popular support, but they kept on
changing their minds and also changing their representatives in
Iraq," he said without giving additional details.
The United
States is trying to set up an interim Iraqi administration after
U.S.-led forces invaded the country two months ago and ousted
President Saddam Hussein. |