Iraqi PM Supports Obama's Withdrawal Plan
Al-Maliki Approves Of Candidate's Timetable For Removing U.S. Troops From Iraq Within 16 Months
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Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. (AP)
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When asked when he thinks U.S. troops should leave Iraq, al-Maliki told the magazine, "As soon as possible, as far as we are concerned."
He added, "U.S. presidential candidate Barack Obama is right when he talks about 16 months."
Al-Maliki deferred, however, from offering outright support for Obama's candidacy. "Of course, this is by no means an election endorsement," he said. "Who they choose as their president is the Americans' business."
The prime minister, who has spoken of setting a timetable for U.S. withdrawal - an option that has been anathema to the White House - discounted the Bush adminstration's concerns.
"So far the Americans have had trouble agreeing to a concrete timetable for withdrawal, because they feel it would appear tantamount to an admission of defeat," al-Maliki told Der Spiegel. "But that isn't the case at all. If we come to an agreement, it is not evidence of a defeat, but of a victory, of a severe blow we have inflicted on al Qaeda and the militias."
The Obama campaign's national security adviser said the Illinois Democrat welcomes al-Maliki's support.
In a statement, Susan Rice said al-Maliki's position "presents an important opportunity to transition to Iraqi responsibility."
"Unless al-Maliki reverses course on this reported remark, his statements should be a major boon for Obama," said CBSNews.com senior political editor Vaughn Ververs. "His seeming endorsement of Obama's troop withdrawal timetable - especially when the candidate is on the ground in the Middle East - could undercut one of John McCain's main rationales for his candidacy - that is, winning the war in Iraq and exiting when events on the ground warrent.
"If the Iraqis are pushing the U.S. to leave, it will be hard for McCain to argue we should stay for an indefinate period of time."
The story of al-Maliki's backing of Obama's 16-month withdrawal plan is also embarrassing to the White House, which has curdled at talk of a timetable. But news of the interview was made even more pronounced when a White House staffer accidentally e-mailed a Reuters article about al-Maliki's comments to reporters, thereby giving it even more exposure than the German interview might have generated.
A White House spokesman said, "It was a mistake," claiming it was intended to be part of an internal distribution of news clips.
As to the substance of the prime minister's comments, CBS News White House correspondent Mark Knoller reports that the Bush administration is taking al-Maliki's approval of a timetable (or, perhaps, an "aspirational time horizon") as a sign of success on the part of the U.S. government.
"It is because of the President's bold surge strategy that we've been able to achieve the gains we're seeing today - be it security, economic or political progress (evidenced today by the Sunni bloc coming back into the government)," White House Spokesman Scott Stanzel said.
"It is our shared view that should the recent security gains continue, we will be able to meet our joint aspirational time horizons," Stanzel said.
Petraeus: Al Qaeda May Be Diverting Fighters From Iraq To Pakistan-Afghan Border
Senior leaders of al Qaeda may be diverting fighters from the war in Iraq to the Afghan frontier area, the top American commander in Iraq told The Associated Press on Saturday.
Gen. David Petraeus also said al Qaeda may be reconsidering Iraq as its highest priority war front.
"There is some intelligence that has picked this up," he said in the interview in his office at the U.S. Embassy along the Tigris River. "It's not solid gold intelligence," he added, stressing that the reliability of the information has not been confirmed.
Petraeus said the information was based on human intelligence, meaning informants.
"There are unsubstantiated rumors and reflections that perhaps some foreign fighters originally intended for Iraq may have gone to the FATA," he said, referring to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan, where militants have a secure staging ground for movements into neighboring Afghanistan.
Petraeus said that until now, al Qaeda communications have made clear that Iraq is its highest priority for battle. "That could be under review."
Brown: No Artificial Timetable
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Saturday that plans are being made to scale back troops in Iraq, but refused to consider an "artificial timetable" for withdrawing Britain's remaining 4,000 soldiers.
Brown's comments - following meetings with Iraqi leaders - come in advance of next week's scheduled address to British lawmakers on Iraq, when he is expected to give more details on troop reduction plans as insurgent attacks and militia violence drops sharply around Iraq.
No specific troop withdrawal figures have been made public, but a senior British military officer has predicted substantial troop cuts in Iraq next year.
"It is certainly our intention that we reduce troop numbers, but I am not going to give an artificial timetable at the moment," Brown said following talks with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and President Jalal Talabani.
A departure of more British forces will have little bearing on the battlefield. The troops, mostly based outside the southern city of Basra, no longer have a combat role and are involved mostly with training Iraqi security units.
Although Britain maintains the second-largest foreign military force in Iraq, it is dwarfed by the approximately 150,000 U.S. soldiers currently in the country.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive 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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- Reply to this comment
- Ousting one man and killing over one million???
I find it amazing how the far left gets away with continuously fabicating these outlandish numbers.
In June 2006, the Lancet claimed some 601,027 dead.
At the same time, the Iraqi health ministry claimed some 151,000 deaths.
Last August (2007), Opinion Research Business claimed 1,033,000 deaths.
The numbers seem more like estimates of enemy casualties during the Vietnam War, where an enemy combat death was reported for every "x" shots fired by US troops. Obviously, those numbers were wholly unrealistic and were later proven to be wholly false.
How many have actually died? We don''t know, and the Iraqis don''t know.
How many of those deaths were the result of combat perations against Coalition troops? Again, we don''t know.
Will we or the Iraqis ever be able to provide accurate numbers? Probably not.
Certainly, I grieve over every innocent death.
However, I find that these exagerations serve no useful purpose. - Reply to this comment
- correction;promclaura;ousting one bad man ...and in the process killing over million people ...amazing what a brilliant way of doing things .....hello,da,where our so called christian values of humanity and not the values of vampires.
- Reply to this comment
- correction;promaclaura;sweetheart lets say its all true that radical islam came to light in tyranny ...there is another way of looking at is that radical islams inception came to light due to open injustice and unfair,unblanced foreign policy by the u.s goverments time and time again and that was to be true even before george bushs rein,and its a real fact,but once again you conveniently ignoring the other facts that hit us at home which is that how did this other phenomenon about the religious neocons and fanatic zionist jews came to light along with radical islam ..where is tyranny and may be we are blinded that tyranny does exist in united states of america and we do not realize it..aslong as we get our candy and comfortable bed and we choose to look the other way and condem the world for the same reasons that we are guilty off....
- Reply to this comment
- ousting one bad man ...and in the process killing over million people ...amazing what a brilliant way of do things .....hello,da,where our christian values of humanity and not vampires.
Posted by shazam111
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Actually, "ousting one bad man" didn''t take that many lives. It was the aftermath! The pursuit of the idiot son/darth cheney/carlyle group oil agenda that took all the lives.... - Reply to this comment
- hadenough43, I would have supported the ousting of Saddam under any President''''s administration. I felt this way before President Bush took office. If President Clinton had stopped the no-fly zone and went into Iraq to oust that evil man I would have applauded him. So making this a war about oil that we haven''''t seen is unrealistic to me. To eddynewhope, Darfur is another region ravaged by jihad, and Somalia is wall to wall extremism. I don''''t know what will happen for those poor people either. The jihad movements in these countries are killing innocent moderates and I don''''t think anything will be done until non-jihadists stand up to these distorters of a religion. My children''''t doctor is a muslim and he is wonderful caring man.
Also, sorry for getting people off the subject, like many of you know it is frustrating to hear opinions from those who don''''t have your perspective.
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Posted by ProMacLaura at 03:35 PM : Jul 20, 2008
+ report abuse
ousting one bad man ...and in the process killing over million people ...amazing what a brilliant way of do things .....hello,da,where our christian values of humanity and not vampires. - Reply to this comment
- promaclaura;sweetheart lets say its all true that radical islam came to light in tyranny ...there is another way of looking at is that radical islams inception came to light due to open injustice and unfair,unblanced foreign policy by the u.s goverments time and time again and that was to be true even before george bushs rein,and its a real fact,but once again you conveniently ignoring the other facts that hit us at home which is that how did this other phenomenon about the religious neocons and fanatic zionist jews came light along with radical islam ..where is tyranny and may be we are blinded that tyranny does exist in united states of america and we do not realize it..aslong as we get our candy and comfortable bed and we choose to look the other way and condem the world for the same reasons that we are guilty off....
- Reply to this comment
- hadenough43, I would have supported the ousting of Saddam under any President''''s administration. I felt this way before President Bush took office. If President Clinton had stopped the no-fly zone and went into Iraq to oust that evil man I would have applauded him. So making this a war about oil that we haven''''t seen is unrealistic to me.
Posted by ProMacLaura
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Ok, fine. The problem is - we "ousted Saddam" several years ago....WHY ARE WE STILL THERE?? - Reply to this comment
- hadenough43, I would have supported the ousting of Saddam under any President''s administration. I felt this way before President Bush took office. If President Clinton had stopped the no-fly zone and went into Iraq to oust that evil man I would have applauded him. So making this a war about oil that we haven''t seen is unrealistic to me. To eddynewhope, Darfur is another region ravaged by jihad, and Somalia is wall to wall extremism. I don''t know what will happen for those poor people either. The jihad movements in these countries are killing innocent moderates and I don''t think anything will be done until non-jihadists stand up to these distorters of a religion. My children''t doctor is a muslim and he is wonderful caring man.
Also, sorry for getting people off the subject, like many of you know it is frustrating to hear opinions from those who don''t have your perspective. - Reply to this comment
- hadenough43, I would have supported the ousting of Saddam under any President''s administration. I felt this way before President Bush took office. If President Clinton had stopped the no-fly zone and went into Iraq to oust that evil man I would have applauded him. So making this a war about oil that we haven''t seen is unrealistic to me. To eddynewhope, Darfur is another region ravaged by jihad, and Somalia is wall to wall extremism. I don''t know what will happen for those poor people either. The jihad movements in these countries are killing innocent moderates and I don''t think anything will be done until non-jihadists stand up to these distorters of a religion. My children''t doctor is a muslim and he is wonderful caring man.
Also, sorry for getting people off the subject, like many of you know it is frustrating to hear opinions from those who don''t have your perspective. - Reply to this comment



