Iraqi military officials have denied that troops have abandoned positions along the border with Saudi Arabia.
Interior ministry spokesman Brig Gen Saad Maan told the BBC that the border force was functioning normally.
Earlier, al-Arabiya TV reported that Saudi Arabia had deployed 30,000 soldiers along the 900km (560-mile) frontier after Iraqi forces withdrew.
The Saudi personnel were fanning out along the border to prevent attacks by jihadist-led Sunni rebels, it said.
Last week, King Abdullah ordered all necessary measures to be taken to protect Saudi Arabia against "terrorist threats".
On Wednesday, he discussed Iraq and the threat posed by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis) with US President Barack Obama.
Mr Obama also thanked the Saudi monarch for his $500m (£291m) donation to the United Nations to help it address the humanitarian crisis caused by the insurgency in Iraq.
More than one million Iraqis have fled their homes over the month as Sunni rebels led by Isis overran Mosul, Tikrit and other cities and towns in the north and west. At least 2,461 people were killed in violent attacks in June, according to the UN and Iraqi authorities.
Amnesty offerWestern officials in the Iraqi capital said they had no reason to believe that the reported Saudi troop movement had come in response to any direct threat along the border, the BBC's Paul Adams in Baghdad reports.
Their view was that such moves were more likely to represent a prudent step in light of the chaotic situation in Iraq, our correspondent adds.
About 10 days ago, there were reports of clashes between Isis and the Iraqi army in the town of Nukhayb, around 120km (75 miles) from the Saudi border, with witnesses talking about Iraqi troops fleeing towards the Shia holy city of Karbala, about 100km (60 miles) south of Baghdad.
However, there have been no further reports from the area.
Al-Arabiya published a video showing what the Saudi-owned channel said were about 2,500 Iraqi soldiers in the desert east of Karbala who had been ordered to leave their posts along the border with Saudi Arabia.
On Wednesday, up to 45 people were killed in clashes between Iraqi security forces and armed followers of a radical Shia cleric in Karbala, security sources told the Reuters news agency.
The clashes reportedly erupted when police and soldiers, backed by helicopter gunships, tried to arrest Mahmoud al-Sarkhi around midnight on Tuesday, after his supporters started blocking roads and setting up checkpoints around his stronghold in the city.
Also on Wednesday, Prime Minister Nouri Maliki offered an amnesty for all people who had been "involved in actions against the state" but who had now "returned to their senses", excluding those responsible for killings.
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Iraq is being sucked into a wider regional and sectarian war, reports the BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse
The call appeared to be an attempt to split the alliance of jihadists, loyalists of former President Saddam Hussein and anti-government tribesmen who are fighting the government.
But on Thursday, security forces were still struggling to dislodge those who had taken control of Saddam's home city of Tikrit, more than a week after launching a counter-offensive.
India's foreign ministry said the 46 Indian nurses being held by militants in Tikrit were safe, but were being moved to a new location.
Meanwhile, Turkish media reported that 31 Turkish lorry drivers who were seized last month in northern Iraq by Isis militants would be freed soon.
One of the drivers, Mustafa Tezdoner, told Turkey's NTV television: "We are not free at the moment, but we are on our way to Turkey."
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