UPDATED ON:
Friday, July 18, 2008
20:48 Mecca time, 17:48 GMT
 
News Middle East
US: 'No set date' for Iraq pullout

Baghdad says it will be ready to take over security in all provinces by the end of the year [AFP]

The United States and Iraq have agreed to seek "a general time horizon" for withdrawing American troops, according to the White House.

Dana Perino, White House spokeswoman, said on Friday that George Bush, the US president, and Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, had agreed not to set an "arbitrary date for withdrawal".

Iraqi leaders, including al-Maliki, have previously demanded a set timetable be included as part of a security agreement, which deals with the future of US military deployment in Iraq, being negotiated by the two countries.

According to the White House statement, the troop withdrawals are one of several "aspirational goals" which will be implemented depending on conditions on the ground.

Those goals include "the resumption of Iraqi security control in their cities and provinces and the further reduction of US combat forces from Iraq," Perino said.

Ground rules

Washington says an agreement is needed to lay out the ground rules for US forces in Iraq after the UN mandate for their presence expires at year's end, but negotiations have run into trouble, particularly over whether US troops would be immune from Iraqi prosecution.

However, there appeared to be some confusion over whether the agreement would lead to the US quitting Iraq entirely.

While the White House referred only to reducing troop levels, Ali al-Dabbagh, Iraq's government spokesman, said that the aim of the agreement was "to decrease the number of American forces in Iraq and later withdraw them".

Perino said US forces would move "from a primary combat role" to what Washington calls an "overwatch role" of training and advising Iraqi forces, and carrying out special forces operations.
  
"This transition and the subsequent reduction in US forces from Iraq is a testament to the improving capacity of Iraq's Security Forces and the success of joint operations" begun in January 2007, she said.

Security transfer

The US military says that violence across Iraq has fallen to a four-year low.

US-led forces have transferred security in 10 of the country's 18 provinces to Iraqi forces, the most recent being in Diwaniya province on Wednesday.
  
Iraqi leaders believe that they can take over security responsibilities in the remaining eight provinces by the end of this year.

Bush and al-Maliki had aimed to confirm an agreement by July 31, but on Friday the White House spokeswoman said the two leaders had "agreed on a common way forward to conclude these negotiations as soon as possible".

A US embassy official in Baghdad said on Friday that the originally envisaged security pact called the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) had now been "suspended".
  
"The SOFA as we had in Japan or Germany has been suspended or put aside but not thrown away," he told the AFP news agency.
  
He also said the two sides are currently negotiating a "security protocol or operational protocol" that contains the key contents of the SOFA but would be for a "certain period of time".

 Source: Agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 8
 
War Crimes
United States
19/07/2008
US: No set date for Iraq pullout
McCain keeps pointing to the Korean, German and Japan wars and occupation as per future conditions of occupation in Iraq. Yet, the Republican fails to mention that those were wars of aggression that the U.S. was drawn into after being attacked or to shore up the defenses of friendly nations. The Iraqi invasion was a outright US and UK invasion of aggression with no UN Security Council mandate. War Crimes are pending and no where to run or hide the crimes?

matt
United States
19/07/2008
no set date
i think it's important to note that a "general time horizon" for withdrawal is a major change from what we've been hearing from this administration in the past. it implies that american forces must leave eventually. this might not be what people want to hear in terms of a specific date, but it is a step in the right direction. perhaps when iraqi forces regain control of the entire country, there will be more confidence in setting a date.

kj
Afghanistan
18/07/2008
"withdrawl horizion timetable"
pure semantics. iraqis are being played as fools by the puppet controllers. how does it feel to be like occupied palestine?

lj
Afghanistan
18/07/2008
try try again
war criminals should be hunted and prosecuted for their crimes. Israel makes arrests in alleged plot against Bush http://uk.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN9173242220080718

kj
Afghanistan
18/07/2008
"no set date"
pure hypocrisy. bush imposed a deadline on saddam with summer approaching and military equipment from afganistan in the region costing 2.5M/day, he had to settle for "serious consequences" in the stalled un meetings. the invading oilmen in washington apparently think timetables apply to others but not themselves. no wonder other countries have such disdain for us policies. they behave as hypocrites.

bruce futter sr
United States
20/07/2008
pull out
The quicker you get rid of the U.S. the better off your country will be

mc
United States
21/07/2008
almost done
i'm just afraid bush will do something stupid (again) and start a war with iran. that would probably turn in to ww3. and then he could suspend the elections declare marshall law and become a totalitarian ruler of america. it would actually benefit all of the elite rich in america for america to become a third world nation. and I would be called in back in to the U.S. military to fight in yet another war. i really don't like war, but i keep my oath to uphold, defend, and obey.

Jasmine
United States
22/08/2008
Typical hypocrisy.
When I hear our government saying things like "we're leaving Iraq... there's just no set date..." and then I hear them chiding Russia for not honoring their cease-fire agreement with Georgia and leaving on time, I just think: HYPOCRITES!

 
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