US diplomats and military officers have held secret meetings with Iraqi Sunni
insurgents in search of ways to end fighting between the two sides, the Time
magazine reported on its Web site on Sunday.
One such meeting took place in the heavily guarded US-controlled green zone
in Baghdad, between an Iraqi negotiator -- amiddle-aged former member of Saddam
Hussein's regime and the senior representative of the self-described nationalist
insurgency,and two members of the US military, the report said.
The US officers pressed the Iraqi for names of other insurgent leaders, while
the Iraqi said the newly elected Shiite-dominated government was being
controlled by Iran, according to the report.
Two such meetings had taken place, the Iraqi negotiator was quoted as saying.
While US officials would not confirm the detailsof any specific meetings, the
report quoted sources in Washington as saying that for the first time the United
States was in direct contact with members of the Sunni insurgency, including
former members of Saddam Hussein's regime.
The secret contacts with insurgent leaders were being conductedmainly by US
diplomats and intelligence officers, the report quoted Pentagon officials as
saying.
According to the report, both the insurgents and the US side had been feeling
each other out for months, and some of the earliest advances were made last year
through Jordanian intelligence officers.