TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran on Sunday set March
2 as the date for President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s landmark visit
to Iraq, in the first confirmation of the event from the Iranian
side.
Earlier in the month, Iraqi Foreign Minister
Hoshyar Zebari had said that the first ever visit by the head of
state of the Islamic Republic would be March 2 and he would meet
with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and President Jalal
Talabani in the course of his two day visit.
"The visit is tentatively set for March 2,"
spokesman of Iran’s Foreign Ministry, Mohammad Ali Hosseini,
told reporters in his weekly news briefing. "We are working on
fixing the exact date for the visit."
Hosseini said the visit was in response to an
invitation by the Iraqi government and occurs in the framework
of "friendly ties."
Iraq launched a ruinous eight-year war against
Iran in the 1980s that left an estimated 1 million people killed
or wounded on both side.
But relations have improved since the toppling
of Saddam Hussein’s regime in 2003. Iran is overwhelmingly
Shiite, and Iraq has a roughly 60 percent Shiite majority that
emerged from decades of marginalization to become the country’s
dominant force after Saddam’s ouster.
Many of Iraq’s senior Shiite politicians lived
in exile in Iran during the 35-year rule of Saddam’s Baath
party, and maintain ties to Iran’s leadership.
The U.S. military says Iran is arming, training
and bankrolling Shiite militiamen in Iraq who have used
Iranian-supplied roadside bombs to kill hundreds of American
soldiers. Iran denies the charge.
Since May, Iran and the U.S. have held three
rounds of ambassador-level talks on security in Iraq. But Iran
postponed the fourth round, set for early February, without
giving any specific reason.