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Bush mulling Iraq troop recommendations

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 4, 2008
US President George W. Bush is drawing closer to a decision on US troop levels in Iraq after receiving top US commander General David Petraeus's advice, the White House said Thursday.

The vastly unpopular war is a central front in the political war ahead of the November 4 elections that will decide who succeeds Bush -- and who will inherit the conflict he launched with the March 2003 US-led invasion.

"The president is now considering his options and I would expect that as he works through that, as soon as he's finished, we'd be able to provide you more information," said White House spokeswoman Dana Perino.

Perino offered no further details, but hinted that US Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Admiral Michael Mullen, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs, may say more at a congressional hearing next week.

The issue of possible US troop withdrawals from Iraq looms large over the US presidential elections, with the vastly unpopular war fueling the White House hopes of Bush's Democratic foes.

Bush's preferred successor, Senator John McCain, has pinned his hopes on his early and fervent support of the so-called US troop "surge" that has helped bring down once-overwhelming levels of sectarian violence.

McCain's rival, Democrat Barack Obama, has pledged to begin troop withdrawals immediately if elected, and foresees most combat troops being out of Iraq by late 2010.

Recent polls show two out of three Americans oppose the war and want to see quick withdrawal, but many view the "surge" as a success story, and Bush has repeatedly said that US politics will not shape his decision.

But the US president now faces freshly confident Iraqi leaders who are calling for a precise date for US forces to leave -- the kind of timetable Bush has long described as a recipe for a catastrophic defeat.

The issue has been one of the sticking points in talks between Washington and Baghdad on an accord laying out the rights and responsibilities of US troops after the UN mandate for the occupation lapses in December.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki says the deal is all but done, and that it calls for foreign forces to be gone from his war-torn country by 2011.

Petraeus told the Financial Times in an interview published Thursday that US combat troops could be out of Baghdad by July 2009, but did not offer any information about the strategic agreement.

The general recently wrapped up a 45-day assessment period, which began in late July when the last of the five US brigades sent to Iraq as part of the escalation announced in January 2007 returned home.

"That period now having ended, General Petraeus through his chain of command has given his assessment, and Secretary Gates and Chairman Mullen have briefed the president," said Perino.

Bush has repeatedly said he hopes to bring more US troops home, though Georgia's recent withdrawal of its roughly 2,000 soldiers from Iraq in the face of a war with Russia may have complicated the US strategic picture.

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Immunity a sticking point in US-Iraq security pact: report
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 1, 2008
Iraq and the United States are still far apart on the issue of immunity for American troops, according to a draft security agreement between the two countries published by an Iraqi paper on Monday.







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