Barack Obama, the US president, has announced that US combat forces will leave Iraq by August 2010.
The plan would pull combat troops out of Iraq 19 months after Obama took office in January this year, slightly longer than the 16 months he promised while on the campaign trail in 2008. "Let me say this as plainly as I can: By August 31, 2010, our combat mission in Iraq will end," Obama said on Friday in a speech at Camp Lejeune, a Marine Corps base in North Carolina on Friday. Obama said that a transitional force of between 35,000 to 50,000 US troops would remain in the country after this deadline to help the "transition to full Iraqi responsibility". The transitional force would train Iraqi security forces, conduct targeted "anti-terror" missions and protect civilian efforts and leave at the end of 2011 as mandated in a previous Iraq-US agreement known as the Status of Forces Agreement (Sofa) forged by George Bush, Obama's predecesor, he said. "I intend to remove all US troops from Iraq by the end of 2011. We will complete this transition to Iraqi responsibility, and we will bring our troops home with the honour that they have earned," he said. Obama also assured Iraqis that the US "pursues no claim" on the country's territory or resources, responding to Iraqi fears about continuing US troop presence in the nation. "We respect your sovereignty and the tremendous sacrifices you have made for your country [and] we seek a full transition to Iraqi responsibility for the security of your country," he said. The US president also said that while Iraq's neighbours had not always aided the nation's security the US was willing to pursue "principled and sustained engagement" with all nations in the region including Iran and Syria. However Obama said that the future of the country was ultimately in the hands of the Iraqis themselves. "The most important decisions that have to be made about Iraq's future must now be made by Iraqis," he said. Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera's senior analyst, says that Iraq remains a fragile country with there is a power struggle below the surface and it remains to be seen how the US will deal with Iran and other regional players. Senior Obama administration officials also told AP on Friday that, of the roughly 100,000 US combat troops to be pulled out of Iraq over the next 18 months, most will remain in the war zone until least the end of this year to ensure national elections due to be held provisionally in December this year go smoothly. The maintenance of a residual force for a period of time in the country does not come as a surprise, but some in Obama's own party had questioned the size of it. "When they talk about 50,000, that's a little higher number than I had anticipated," Harry Reid, the senate majority leader, said. Some Republicans criticised the announcement, with John Boehner, the House Republican leader, saying that while such proposals may have sounded good during the election campaign "I do think it's important we listen to those commanders and our diplomats who are there to understand how fragile the situation is". There are currently about 142,000 US troops stationed in Iraq. More than 4,250 US military members have died since the war began in March 2003, though US military deaths plunged by two-thirds in 2008 from the previous year. Some analysts have attributed the fall in casualties to improving security after a troop build-up, or so-called surge, in 2007 (Source: Agencies)
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