Iraqi PM warns terror comeback as he seeks U.S. arms

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Iraqi Prime Minster Nouri al- Maliki warned here on Thursday that terrorism fueled by the civil war in neighboring Syria may come back in his country, as he seeks U.S. arms to combat the rising insurgency.

Maliki said at the U.S. Institute of Peace that the power vacuum created by political turmoil in the Middle East has created a "second chance" for terrorist groups such as al-Qaeda, as they exploited the vacuum and gradually gained ground.

He placed much of the blame for rising violence in Iraq on the civil war in Syria, warning if the situation in Iraq continues to worsen, it could be "disastrous" for the whole region or even the whole world.

Maliki is in Washington to seek U.S. arms for the Iraqi army.

At a brief press conference in Baghdad airport before his departure for Washington, he said "The most important thing is to provide Iraq with weapons of an offensive nature to fight terrorism and hunt down the armed group."

Maliki had breakfast with U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel respectively on Wednesday and Thursday, and is scheduled to meet with President Barack Obama on Friday. Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari also met with his U. S. counterpart John Kerry Thursday.