KIEV, Ukraine, March 22, 2005

Ukraine Orders Iraq Pullout

6th-Largest Coalition Partner To Fully Withdraw By End Of Year

    • Viktor Yushchenko is sworn in as president in January

      Viktor Yushchenko is sworn in as president in January  (AP)

    • An Iraqi woman looks through razor wire near the heavily fortified Green Zone, during a protest march Tuesday against plans to evict 350 families from a former government apartment complex in Baghdad.

      An Iraqi woman looks through razor wire near the heavily fortified Green Zone, during a protest march Tuesday against plans to evict 350 families from a former government apartment complex in Baghdad.  (AP)

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(CBS/AP)  President Viktor Yushchenko has signed an order for the withdrawal of Ukraine's troops from Iraq, the head of the country's security council said Tuesday — cementing a pledge by the new leadership to bring back its 1,650-strong force.

Ukraine began pulling out its servicemen from Iraq last week and plans to complete the withdrawal of its troops by the end of the year. The ex-Soviet republic, which first sent troops to Iraq in September 2003, provided the sixth-largest contingent in the U.S.-led coalition.

Eighteen Ukrainian soldiers have died in Iraq and more than two dozen have been wounded, fueling public dismay about the unpopular deployment.

In other developments:

  • Militants targeted a U.S. patrol with a roadside bomb Tuesday that killed four nearby civilians in the northern city of Mosul, where an assassination attempt against top police officials sparked clashes that left more than two dozen insurgents dead or captured.

  • Morgue officials in southern Iraq said they had received a half-dozen corpses of Iraqi army soldiers, each with bound hands and bullet-riddled heads and torsos.

  • Iraq sought to soothe relations with neighboring Jordan, with both nations agreeing to return their respective ambassadors after a weekend diplomatic dispute.

  • Over the weekend, U.S. soldiers, ambushed by dozens of Iraqi militants near the infamous "Triangle of Death," responded by killing 26 guerrillas in the largest single insurgent death toll since last fall's battle for Fallujah, the U.S. military says.

    More than 130 Ukrainian soldiers returned home last week, and Ukraine plans to withdraw an additional 550 soldiers from Iraq by May 15 and the rest of the original contingent by the end of the year, the Defense Ministry has said.

    The head of Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council, Petro Poroshenko told a news conference Tuesday that in a formal move the president had signed an order making the withdrawal irreversible.

    "The president has signed the plan for a staged withdrawal of our peacekeeping contingent from Iraq," Poroshenko said. "The plan is a very carefully crafted document which details the terms of the Ukrainian pullout from Iraq."

    The end date for the pullout will be "fixed after consultations with the other coalition members" and the Ukrainian contingent is likely to leave Iraq in November or December, Poroshenko said.

    The troop pullout was one of the new president's campaign promises.

    Ukraine strongly opposed the U.S.-led war but later agreed to send a large contingent to serve under Polish command in central and southern Iraq.

    The deployment was widely seen as an effort by former President Leonid Kuchma to repair relations with Washington, frayed by allegations that he approved the sale of radar systems to Saddam Hussein's regime in violation of U.N. sanctions.

    Ukraine's participation in the U.S.-led coalition is deeply unpopular at home, but Yushchenko has said Ukraine should keep a presence in Iraq and take part in development and reconstruction efforts there.

    Last year, Ukrainian companies were awarded contracts to supply the Iraqi military and development companies with weapons, equipment and vehicles.

    Poroshenko said that a Ukrainian delegation of diplomats and defense officials will visit Iraq next week.

    ©MMV CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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