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Wednesday, February 02, 2011

US aims for prolonged stay in Iraq

Wed Feb 2, 2011 6:38AM
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Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Senator John KerryA new US Senate report advises that a large contingent of American troops should remain in war-torn Iraq past the agreed withdrawal date set for the end of the year.


According to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee report, which was made public on Tuesday, American diplomats may not be safe in Iraq if the US military pulls out its remaining 50,000 troops there.

This comes as the United States prepares to deploy some 17,000 US diplomats and security contractors to the Mesopotamian country over the next few months.

And now in order to protect these American envoys, Washington is proposing to keep a large number of US troops there indefinitely.

To make the extension of US troops presence in Iraq possible, Committee chairman Senator John Kerry said Tuesday that he is drawing up multi-year funding plans for a US civilian and semi military contingent in Iraq.

Meanwhile, both General Lloyd Austin, commander of the US military in Iraq, and US ambassador to Iraq James F. Jeffrey, warned Congress it had better be prepared to fund the new, largest of its kind, US civilian surge, which they cautioned could be necessary for years.

"We face a critical moment now in Iraq, where we will either step up to the plate, finish the job and build on the sacrifices made, or we will risk core US national security interests, and cede the field to al-Qaeda and other dangerous regional influences," Jeffrey told the Democratic-led Senate panel.

On his part, Austin stressed that in order to "erect stability" in Iraq, US troops should remain there "until 2012."


The new plan clearly violates a withdrawal agreement between Baghdad and Washington, and US President Barak Obama's pledge to pull out all US troops from Iraq by December 2011.

Analysts now say the Senate report could be cited as evidence that the United States has no intention of leaving war-wrecked Iraq anytime soon.

“I think the intention behind all these discussions is to maintain a long term presence in Iraq in some sort of form. And this raises questions about whether or not Iraq is really a sovereign country,” Carl Osgood from the Executive Intelligence Review told Press TV.


This is while, along with the Iraqi people, the Iraqi government has signaled it will not allow US troops to remain in the Middle Eastern country past the December deadline.

An overwhelming majority of the American people are also strongly opposed to such a move.

Since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, some 4,440 US soldiers have been killed and more than 31,830 others injured.

The devastating war has also left more than 1,300,000 Iraqi civilians dead and some 4.7 million Iraqis displaced.

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