CAIRO - Nearly two-dozen previously unknown Iraqi insurgent groups announced a new coalition to fight against foreign occupation but also set conditions for talks with the United States in a statement on a website affiliated with the country's deposed Baath Arab Socialist party.

The 22 groups said their leader is Izzat al-Douri, the highest ranking member of the late president Saddam Hussein's party still at large.

In the nearly half-hour video message, an unidentified man, face blurred, was shown sitting behind a table with an Iraqi flag on his right side reading a statement announcing the formation of the new alliance called "The Jihad and Liberation.''

The new alliance laid down a series of conditions for talks with the United States. It demanded an unconditional withdrawal of foreign forces from Iraq, immediately or within a short time, the release of all detainees, return of the security forces to their status before the occupation and a halt to all operations against the people.

"If the enemy wants to withdraw and save face, they should sit down and speak directly with the resistance to discuss implementing these sacred principles. Otherwise, the only alternative is their collapse and flight,'' the statement said.

Ayad Allawi, Iraq's first post-Saddam prime minister, has recently said he held talks with members of the Baathist party loyal to al-Douri, for which he was severely criticized by Iraq's current prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki.

The statement made no mention of al Qaeda in Iraq but it contained slogans praising Arab nationalism and the Arab nation's great past. Al Qaeda's extremist ideology does not recognize nationalism but calls for an Islamic state.

There have been reports of clashes in Iraq between the more nationalist and secular elements of the insurgency with groups following al Qaeda.

The coalition is led by a group linked to al-Douri.

An Islamic website linked to extremist groups such as al Qaeda also carried the announcement but ridiculed al-Douri and the new group.