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Britain to pull troops from Iraq
London -
British troops will start a major withdrawal from Iraq next May under
detailed plans on military disengagement to be published next month,
The Observer can reveal.
The document being drawn up by the
British government and the U.S. will be presented to the Iraqi
parliament in October and will spark fresh controversy over how long
British troops will stay in the country. Tony Blair hopes that,
despite continuing and widespread violence in Iraq, the move will show
that there is progress following the conflict of 2003.
Britain has already privately
informed Japan - which also has troops in Iraq - of its plans to begin
withdrawing from southern Iraq in May, a move that officials in Tokyo
say would make it impossible for their own 550 soldiers to remain.
The increasingly rapid pace of
planning for British military disengagement has been revealed on the
eve of the Labour Party conference, which will see renewed demands for
a deadline for withdrawal. It is hoped that a clearer strategy on Iraq
will quieten critics who say that the government will not be able to
'move on' until Blair quits. Yesterday, about 10,000 people
demonstrated against the army's continued presence in the country.
Speaking to The Observer this
weekend, the Defence Secretary, John Reid, insisted that the agreement
being drawn up with Iraqi officials was contingent on the continuing
political process, although he said he was still optimistic British
troops would begin returning home by early summer.
'The two things I want to insist
about the timetable is that it is not an event but a process, and that
it will be a process that takes place at different speeds in different
parts of the country. I have said before that I believe that it could
begin in some parts of the country as early as next July. It is not a
deadline, but it is where we might be and I honestly still believe we
could have the conditions to begin handover. I don't see any reason to
change my view.
'But if circumstances change I have
no shame in revising my estimates.'
The disclosures follow rising demands
for the government to establish a clearer strategy for bringing troops
home following the kidnapping of two British SAS troopers in Basra and
the scenes of violence that surrounded their rescue. Last week Blair's
own envoy to Iraq, Sir Jeremy Greenstock, warned that Britain could be
forced out if Iraq descends so far into chaos that 'we don't have any
reasonable prospect of holding it together'.
Continued tension between the Iraqi
police force, the Iraqi administration and British troops was revealed
again yesterday when an Iraqi magistrate called for the arrest of the
two British special forces soldiers. who were on a surveillance
mission when they were taken into custody by Iraqi police and
allegedly handed on to a militia.
For Blair, the question of withdrawal
is one of the most difficult he is facing. The Prime Minister has
abandoned plans, announced last February, to publish his own exit
strategy setting out the milestones which would have to be met before
quitting: instead, the plans are now being negotiated between a
commission representing the Shia-dominated Iraqi government, and
senior U.S. and UK diplomats and military commanders in Baghdad.
Senior military sources have told The
Observer that the document will lay out a point-by-point 'road map'
for military disengagement by multinational forces, the first steps of
which could be put in place soon after December's nationwide
elections.
Each stage of the withdrawal would be
locally judged on regional improvements in stability, with units being
withdrawn as Iraqi units are deemed capable of taking over. Officials
familiar with the negotiations said that conditions for withdrawal
would not demand a complete cessation of insurgent violence, or the
end of al-Qaeda atrocities.
According to the agreement under
negotiation, each phase would be triggered when key security,
stability and political targets have been reached. The phased
withdrawal strategy - the British side of which is expected to take at
least 12 months to complete - would see UK troops hand over command
responsibility for security to senior Iraqi officers, while remaining
in support as a reserve force.
In the second phase British Warriors
and other armoured vehicles would be removed from daily patrols,
before a complete withdrawal of British forces to barracks.
The final phase - departure of units
- would follow a period of months where Iraqi units had demonstrated
their ability to deal with violence in their areas of operation.
Blair will tackle his critics over
Iraq in his conference speech, aides said this weekend, but would
decline to give a public deadline for withdrawing troops. He is
expected to make several major interventions on the war in the coming
weeks, before a vote on the new constitution in mid-October,
explaining how Iraq could be steered towards a sufficiently stable
situation to allow troops to come home.
'What we are not going to set out is
a timetable: what we are going to set out is a process of developing
that security capability,' said a Downing Street source. 'We don't
want to be there any longer than we have to be, the Iraqis don't want
us to be there any longer than we have to be, but the Iraqi Prime
Minister has made it very clear that our presence there is one that is
necessary.'
It was revealed yesterday that an
Iraqi judge issued the warrants for the arrest of the two rescued
soldiers, accusing them of killing one policeman and wounding another,
carrying unlicensed weapons and holding false identification.
The continuing preparations for a
military withdrawal come, however, as officials are bracing themselves
for a new political crisis in Iraq next month, with what many regard
as the inevitable rejection of a new constitution by a two-thirds
majority in three provinces, sufficient to kill the document and
trigger new elections.
The same officials believe that a
failure of the controversial constitution - which Sunnis say favours
the Shia majority - would require at least another year of political
negotiations, threatening any plans to disengage. -- Guardian
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