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UK PM Blair to urge Syria, Iran to help in West Asia

London, Nov 13: British Prime Minister Tony Blair will today call for Syria and Iran to be engaged in efforts to stem violence in Iraq and to secure a broader West Asia peace settlement.

Blair will argue the need for a West Asia strategy that includes making clear to Damascus and Tehran how they can help in the region while warning them of the consequences of hindering peace, a spokeswoman said.

His comments, to be made in an annual foreign policy speech, will show his willingness to work with Syria and Iran on Iraq -- an idea so far spurned by US President George W Bush, who is fiercely critical of both countries.

Blair's remarks come on the day Bush meets a US bipartisan panel that is exploring alternative strategies on Iraq.

Engaging with Syria and Iran on Iraq is an idea favoured by some members of the panel, which is co-chaired by former US secretary of state James Baker.

Blair, Bush's top ally on Iraq, will address the panel, the Iraq Study Group, via video link tomorrow.

Bush is now considering a shift in approach to Iraq after his Republican Party received a drubbing in last week's mid-term elections, losing control of both houses of Congress, largely because of anger over the war.

Pressure on both leaders to find a way to gradually withdraw their troops from Iraq is growing as the death toll mounts. Four British soldiers were killed in southern Iraq yesterday.

A broad strategy for the region must include bringing peace to Palestine and Lebanon, Blair will say.

Blair has made WAsia peace a key goal of his last months in office. He is expected to step down by mid-2007.

Iraq cannot be seen in isolation, he will say.

The strategy would make clear ''to Syria and Iran the basis on which they can help the peaceful development of the Middle East rather than hinder it, and the consequences of not doing so,'' the spokeswoman added.

She could not elaborate on the nature of the consequences.

Blair, whose popularity has been severely dented by Iraq and his alliance with Bush, will also argue that Britain must stay close to America and to the European Union.

Partnerships with like-minded nations are key as new powers emerge in the world, he will say.

''Anti-Americanism or Euroscepticism are not merely foolish, they are the surest route to the destruction of our true national interest,'' Blair will say in a familiar message.

Those twin alliances are the life source of British power, influence and weight in a changing world, he will say.

Blair will add: ''When people say: yes, but we want a British' foreign policy, I say: of course we do, but in today's world a foreign policy based on strong alliances, is the only British' policy which works.''

Reuters

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