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imageBAGHDAD: Indian Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid met with senior Iraqi officials on Thursday as part of New Delhi's push for greater energy security as it looks to ensure sustained economic growth.

Khurshid met with his Iraqi counterpart Hoshyar Zebari and was to hold talks with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Deputy Prime Minister responsible for energy affairs Hussein al-Shahristani with a range of topics to be discussed, though securing critical oil supplies for Asia's third largest economy was at the top of the agenda.

"In India's growth story, we need energy security and Iraq is intrinsic to India's strategic positioning for purposes of energy security," Khurshid told AFP on the first visit to Iraq by an Indian foreign minister since 1990.

Asked if ties with Iraq had taken on renewed urgency as India looks to reduce its dependency on oil from Iran, which has been hit by sanctions tied to its controversial nuclear programme, Khurshid replied: "That would be a very Machiavellian and a calculating way of looking at it."

But, he acknowledged, "those are all relevant factors".

Iraq, which currently exports around 2.6 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil, is looking to dramatically boost its energy output in the coming years, with energy officials targeting overall production capacity of 9 million bpd by 2017.

Khurshid said his visit would also concentrate on boosting trade between India and Iraq, particularly in pharmaceuticals, infrastructure, and agriculture and oil exploration.

Whereas firms from the West, Turkey, South Korea and China have sought to win major government contracts in Iraq as Baghdad has looked to restore its conflict-battered infrastructure and dilapidated economy, Indian companies have been noticeably absent.

The minister insisted that would soon change, and that while security was a concern in a country where more than 1,000 people were killed in May, the highest figure since 2008, he argued that "Indian industry is welcomed".

"We have to adjust our conduct to meet local requirements."

Khurshid's trip to Iraq is the first since then-foreign minister I.K. Gujral visited Baghdad in 1990, according to the Indian foreign ministry.

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