Vice President Joe Biden landed Saturday on what appeared to be a dual mission in Baghdad: to visit U.S. troops during the July Fourth weekend and coax Iraqi leaders into ending their government impasse.
Top Obama administration officials have been reluctant to visit Iraq since its deadlocked March election failed to produce a clear winner. Biden's trip may signal the U.S. is stepping up its efforts to hammer out an agreement among Iraqi political rivals and get a new government in place as soon as possible.
Biden is the White House's point man on Iraq issues, and was last in Iraq in January. He visited three times last year.
The vice president landed at an air force base in Baghdad and was immediately scheduled to head into meetings with U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Christopher Hill, the top American military commander in Iraq, U.S. Army Gen. Ray Odierno, and the top UN envoy to Iraq, Ad Melkert.
Biden will "affirm the United States' long term commitment to Iraq and discuss recent developments" with Iraqi officials, the White House said in a statement Saturday. He is expected to meet with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and the premier's main political rival, Ayad Allawi.
High ranking U.S. senators -- Republicans John McCain from Arizona and Lindsey Graham from South Carolina as well as Joe Lieberman, an independent from Connecticut -- also met Biden at the Baghdad airport on Saturday. They are in Iraq on an unrelated trip and did not travel here with the vice president.
Earlier on Saturday, McCain, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, met with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in the Iraqi capital.
Biden's trip comes at a sensitive time for Iraq. The newly elected parliament is scheduled to meet later this month for the second time since the March 7 vote, but vying political factions remain deadlocked over which bloc has enough support to pick its new leaders, including prime minister.
Parliament has only about a month to end the impasse before the start of Ramadan in August, when little official business gets done in the Arab world. Adding to the urgency, all but 50,000 U.S. troops are set to leave Iraq by the end of August in a test of whether the fledgling democracy's security forces are ready to protect its people from insurgents and other terror threats.
Persistent violence has raised fears that al-Qaida in Iraq and other militants are trying to exploit the political deadlock to foment unrest and derail security gains as the American military prepares to withdraw all of its troops by the end of next year.
Analysts and some Iraqi lawmakers have warned that the end to the political gridlock still could be months away. Some Iraqi political leaders, including Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, who greeted the vice president at the airport, have accused the U.S. of being more focused on the withdrawal of American troops than on helping Iraq end its political impasse. There are currently about 77,500 U.S. troops on the ground in Iraq.
Al-Maliki, who leads a Shiite political coalition, is battling to keep his job after the Sunni-backed Iraqiya list narrowly won the most seats in the March 7 balloting. But al-Maliki has tried to outmaneuver his challengers by creating a so-called super-Shiite alliance that would give him more seats in parliament than Iraqiya, which is led by his chief rival, Allawi.
Iraqiya leaders have claimed they should have the first crack at forming the government because they won the most seats on election day. But a March court opinion opened the door to the possibility that the largest bloc could be one created after the election through negotiations -- meaning that if the super-Shiite coalition holds together, it could have the right to form the government.
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