|
|
 |
 |
Blair announces Plan of Troops
Withdrawal from Iraq
Pakistan
Times' UK Bureau
LONDON (UK): Britain will
withdr aw
around 1,600 troops from Iraq in the coming months and aims to further cut
its 7,100-strong contingent by late summer if Iraqi forces can secure the
country's south, Prime Minister Tony Blair said Wednesday.
The announcement, on the same day Denmark said it would withdraw its 460
troops and Lithuania said it was considering pulling out its small
contingent, comes as the U.S. is implementing an increase of 21,000 more
troops for Iraq — putting Washington on an opposite track as its main
coalition allies.
Analysts say there is little point in boosting forces in largely Shiite
southern Iraq, where most non-U.S. coalition troops are concentrated. Yet as
more countries draw down or pull out, it could create a security vacuum if
radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr stirs up trouble.
Blair told the House of Commons that British troops will stay in Iraq until
at least 2008 and work to secure the Iran-Iraq border and maintain supply
routes to coalition troops. He told lawmakers that "increasingly our role
will be support and training, and our numbers will be able to reduce
accordingly."
"The actual reduction in forces will be from the present 7,100 — itself down
from over 9,000 two years ago and 40,000 at the time of the conflict — to
roughly 5,500," Blair said.
If Iraqi forces are judged ready to assume more responsibility for security
in southern Iraq, Britain could further reduce its force level to below
5,000 once a base at Basra Palace is transferred to Iraqi control in late
summer, Blair said.
Blair said Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had agreed to the plan.
"What all of this means is not that Basra is how we want it to be. But it
does mean that the next chapter in Basra's history can be written by
Iraqis," Blair said.
Denmark said it would withdraw its troops from southern Iraq by August. The
decision had been made with the Iraqi government and Britain, under whose
command the Danish forces are serving near Basra, Prime Minister Anders Fogh
Rasmussen said.
He added that Denmark would replace the troops with surveillance helicopters
and civilian advisers. He said he spoke Tuesday with Bush who expressed
"both understanding and satisfaction that the situation in Iraq makes it
possible for Denmark and Britain to reduce their numbers of troops."
A Defense Ministry spokeswoman in Lithuania, Ruta Apeikyte, said the Baltic
nation is "seriously considering" withdrawing its 53 troops from Iraq in
August. The Lithuanian platoon serves with a Danish battalion near Basra.
Bulgarian lawmakers voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to extend the country's
mission of 120 noncombat troops until March 31, 2008. The unit, under U.S.
command, helps guard the Ashraf refugee camp, north of Baghdad.
The major effect of the British and Danish withdrawals will likely be
political, coming on the heels of Bush's decision to boost U.S. troop
levels. Democratic leaders could use the announcements to pressure Bush to
set his own timetable for U.S. troop withdrawals.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice played down the British pullback,
saying it is consistent with the U.S. plan to turn over more control to
Iraqi forces.
"The British have done what is really the plan for the country as a whole,
which is to transfer security responsibility to the Iraqis as the situation
permits," Rice said in Germany, where she is meeting with the German foreign
minister. "The coalition remains intact and, in fact, the British still have
thousands of troops deployed in Iraq."
Blair and Bush
Blair and Bush talked by secure video link Tuesday about Britain's proposed
withdrawal, U.S. National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe said.
He also said that Bush views Britain's troop cutbacks as "a sign of success"
in Iraq.
"While the United Kingdom is maintaining a robust force in southern Iraq,
we're pleased that conditions in Basra have improved sufficiently that they
are able to transition more control to the Iraqis," Johndroe said.
The British have faced problems recently in the south. Since January 2005,
Basra and Maysan provinces have both fallen under the sway of Shiite
militias, which have resisted British efforts to uproot them. Relations with
the Basra provincial government have also deteriorated.
Anthony Cordesman, an Iraq expert at the Washington-based Center for
Strategic and International Studies, told The Associated Press that although
the British and American strategies appear to be opposite, they will achieve
the same end: a consolidation of Shiite power in Iraq.
The British have already acquiesced to a "situation of quiet sectarian
cleansing" in the south, and their decision to pull out of Basra simply
marks "acceptance of a political reality" of Shiite control in the region,
Cordesman said. He noted, for instance, that southeastern Iraq has been "a
no-go zone" for some time.
"If the Shiites continue to stand down (in Baghdad), the U.S. is fighting
the Sunni insurgents for them," he said, further cementing Shiite control of
the country.
James Denselow, a former researcher at Chatham House, said a British
pullback might upset the delicate coalition the Shiites have managed thus
far to hold together.
"You could argue that what the British withdrawing does is turn the battle
over to intra-Shia fighting," said Denselow, now a doctoral candidate in
Middle Eastern geopolitics at King's College in London. "Once the common
foreigner is out, you're going to see infighting."
Blair acknowledged "the situation in Basra is very different from Baghdad —
there is no Sunni insurgency, no al-Qaida base, little Sunni on Shia
violence," adding that the southern city is nothing like "the challenge of
Baghdad."
The Iraqi capital has suffered from what Blair called an "orgy of terrorism
unleashed upon it in order to crush any possibility of it functioning."
"If Baghdad cannot be secured, the future of the country is in peril. The
enemies of Iraq understand that. We understand it," Blair said.
But opposition Liberal Democrat leader Menzies Campbell said Blair's plan
fell far short of a promise to leave Iraq as a "beacon of democracy" for the
region.
"The unpalatable truth is this ... we will leave behind a country on the
brink of civil war, where reconstruction has stalled, where corruption is
endemic and a region which is a lot less stable than it was in 2003,"
Campbell said.
Besides the United States, Britain and Denmark, the major partners in the
coalition include South Korea (2,300 troops), Poland (900), Australia and
Georgia (both 800) and Romania (600), according to the Brookings
Institution.
South Korea plans to halve its 2,300-member contingent in the northern city
of Irbil by April, and is under pressure from parliament to devise a plan
for a complete withdrawal by year's end. Polish President Lech Kaczynski has
said his country's troops would stay no longer than December.
Blair, who has said he will step down by September after a decade in power,
has seen his foreign-policy record overshadowed by his role as Bush's
leading ally in the unpopular war. As recently as January, Blair rejected
opposition calls to withdraw British troops by October, calling such a plan
irresponsible.●
|
 |
 |
ADVERTISEMENTS
 |
|
|
Place Your Ads Here, Email:
Marketing@PakistanTimes.net |