Iran Rejects Arms Shipment, Supply of Fighter Jets to Iraq
(FNA)- Iran on Wednesday once again rejected media reports alleging that it has supplied Iraq with weapons and fighter jets, and expressed the hope that Iraqi groups agree to form a new government and strengthen unity against terrorist groups.
"Iran has sent no weapons or fighter jets to Iraq," Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marziyeh Afkham told reporters in Tehran on Wednesday.
She voiced concern about the situation in Iraq, and said, "We are sure that none of the Iraqi people will allow the country's disintegration."
Afkham called on all Iraqi groups and streams to form a new government as soon as possible and also accelerate efforts to fight terrorism to end the activities of the terrorist groups in their country.
Senior Iranian officials have repeatedly dismissed the media reports that the country has dispatched Sukhoi fighter jets to Iraq to help the country's combat on terrorist groups.
"The Iraqis have not yet made any demands from the Islamic Republic of Iran for arms shipments; of course if they ask for it, we will certainly consider their request positively," Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian said on Sunday.
He said that Russia has sent a number of Sukhoi fighter jets to Iraq "but the Islamic Republic of Iran has not sent any weapons or fighter jets to Iraq".
Amir Abdollahian also dismissed certain media claims that Commander of Iran's Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Quds Force General Qassem Soleimani is in Iraq to help the country in its war on terrorists.
"The claims regarding the presence of General Soleimani in Iraq are not confirmed by us and we reject the report," he added.
Meantime, Amir Abdollahian said Iran is providing Iraqi officials with consultations on fighting terrorism, but through diplomatic channels.
Iraq's Ambassador to Tehran Mohammad Majid al-Sheikh had also earlier rejected the media claims about the presence of General Soleimani in Baghdad.
"These are just the rumors of biased and despiteful media which are seeking to sow discord among the regional states, specially Iran and Iraq," Majid al-Sheikh said, addressing a conference in Tehran last month.
"Iraq doesn’t need any country neither for weapons nor for the military forces at all; hence, I emphasize that neither General Soleimani nor any other (Iranian) figure is in Iraq," he reiterated.
The US Wall Street Journal in a report in June claimed that Tehran has sent two elite units of its IRGC to Iraq to fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) terrorists - an Al-Qaeda offshoot.
Also other western media alleged that General Soleimani has traveled to Iraq to consult with the Iraqi officials on fighting terrorism.
A few hours later, Amir Abdollahian categorically rejected the report, and told FNA that "the dispatch of Iranian military forces to Iraq is not true".
Also later, Iran's president Hassan Rouhani stressed that Iran is not involved in the clashes in Iraq, and said that the Iraqi nation is able to ward off terrorism.
"We, as the Islamic Republic, are Iraq's friend and neighbor and have good relations with the Iraqi government and nation," Rouhani told reporters in a press conference in June.
"If the Iraqi government wants help, we will study it; of course no demand has yet been raised until today but we are ready for help within the framework of the international laws and at the request of the Iraqi nation," he added.
"Of course, we should know that help and assistance is one issue, and interference and entrance (into the battlefield) is another. If the Iraqi government demands us we will help them, but the entrance of the Iranian troops (onto the scene of battles in Iraq) has never been considered," the president said.
"Since the onset of its establishment, the Islamic Republic has never taken such measures and we have never sent our troops to another country for operations," he said, and added, "Of course, we will provide countries with our consultative views."
The Iranian president further warned of Iran's tough confrontation with the ISIL or any other terrorist group which might come close to the Iranian borders, and said, "If a terrorist group approaches our borders, we will definitely confront it, because our duty is defending our territorial integrity and national interests."
He also warned those states which are providing financial back up and arms supports for the ISIL and other terrorist groups, cautioning that they would return to set fire to those countries as well.
He described terrorism as an important issue in the region, and said the recent events in Iraq happened because the terrorist groups are mad at the results of the election which kept the Shiites and al-Maliki in power through a completely democratic trend.
He said some groups' intention for "compensating their loss and failure in the election through terrorism is not acceptable".
Rouhani further played down the power of the ISIL terrorists, saying that the collapse of Mosul was the product of a whole set of elements and some coordination (made with a number of traitors in the city).