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Bush and Blair discuss new policy
for Iraq
Washington -
Tony Blair and beleaguered President George Bush have had a
long discussion on how to push forward 'change' in the coalition's
policy in Iraq.
In Friday's phone conversation,
Blair, who will give evidence to the Bush-appointed Iraq Study Group
on Tuesday, insisted on the need to regionalise the peace effort and
draw Iran and Syria - which have been accused of supporting insurgents
- into any solution.
The Prime Minister sent his senior
foreign policy adviser, Nigel Sheinwald, to Damascus last month to
hold talks with President Bashar Assad of Syria. Britain has said
Syria must choose between playing a constructive role in the world
community or continuing to support terrorism.
Blair will address the study group -
chaired by the Republican former Secretary of State, James Baker - the
day after Bush does. The British moves have come as America plunges
into a rapid overhaul of its strategy in Iraq, with Bush yesterday
praising his new defence chief as an 'agent of change'.
The speed of the changes now
occurring in American policy on Iraq has stunned many observers as
Washington's political class reacts to last week's victory by the
Democrats. In his weekly radio address yesterday, Bush hailed his new
Defence Secretary, former CIA chief Robert Gates, as an able manager
who 'will provide a fresh outlook on our strategy in Iraq'.
Bush's words will be taken as the
strongest hint yet that major changes in Iraq policy are likely to
come sooner rather than later. Bush will speak to the group tomorrow
along with Vice President Dick Cheney and National Security Adviser
Stephen Hadley. Blair will speak to the group using video conferencing
equipment.
The group is set to report its
findings by the end of the year. The panel has been reported as
believing that Bush's long-standing mantra of 'staying the course' is
untenable; some sort of timetabled military withdrawal, linked to
political and security stability in Iraq, is now seen as more
attractive. Another possible new policy is expected to be exploring
co-operation with Iran and Syria.
Last week's elections showed that the
US public has grown weary of the conflict. Ending the war as soon as
possible has become an overriding political aim for Republicans with
an eye on the White House race of 2008.
The replacement of Rumsfeld with
Gates is seen as paving the way for wide-ranging change. He served on
the group before being chosen to replace Donald Rumsfeld and is party
to its new thinking. In previous public speeches, he has indicated he
believes a strategy of phased withdrawals could see the US leave Iraq
before the next presidential election.
While the group looks at new
strategies, the Pentagon is also examining the situation in Iraq. A
commission headed by the joint chiefs of staff chairman General Peter
Pace was set up in September and may provide alternatives to the
recommendations of the group, when it reports in December.
There is now little desire in any
part of America's body politic for continuing to battle the insurgency
in order to bring stability to the country. Republicans are aware that
their recent drubbing at the polls was largely fuelled by anti-Iraq
war sentiment.
In Iraq the bloodshed continued.
October was one of the most lethal months of the war for US soldiers,
and the casualty rate has not tailed off so far in November. Yesterday
a Polish soldier and another from Slovakia were shot dead in the south
of the country, and eight Iraqis died after two car bombs exploded in
a Baghdad market. -- Guardian News
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