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Bush, Blair Admit 'Missteps' In Iraq

President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair acknowledged difficult times in the Iraq war they launched together in 2003, but both vowed to keep troops there until the new Iraqi government takes control.

"Despite setbacks and missteps, I strongly believe we did and are doing the right thing," Mr. Bush said Thursday evening in a White House news conference with Blair.

For his part, Blair declared that after a meeting earlier this week with Iraq's new prime minister, "I came away thinking the challenge is still immense, but I also came away thinking more certain than ever that we should rise to it."

Blair flew to Washington for talks Thursday evening and Friday with Mr. Bush. The prime minister was reporting on his discussions in Baghdad Monday with Iraq's new prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, who said his forces are capable of taking control of security in all Iraqi provinces within 18 months. Mr. Bush and Blair planned to discuss whether al-Maliki's assertion was realistic.

"We'll see if he's able to follow through on it," White House press secretary Tony Snow said. "It's an interesting question."

With casualties rising and violence rampant, Iraq weighs heavily on Mr. Bush and Blair. Both leaders have plunged in the polls and face growing calls for major troop withdrawals. Mr. Bush is under additional pressure from fellow Republicans who are nervous about losing control of the House or Senate, or both, in the November elections.

A showdown with Iran over its suspected nuclear-weapons program also was high on the agenda for Mr. Bush and Blair. The two leaders also were expected to discuss fading Mideast peace prospects.

In other developments:

  • The top Marine general flew to Iraq on Thursday to caution troops on the danger of becoming "indifferent to the loss of a human life," following allegations that Marines in Iraq murdered civilians.

    "We do not employ force just for the sake of employing force. We use lethal force only when justified, proportional and, most importantly, lawful," Gen. Michael W. Hagee, the Marine Corps commandant, wrote in a statement issued by his office.

  • Tariq Aziz, once the most prominent public face of Saddam Hussein's regime but now thin and pale in his checkered pajamas, defended his former boss in court Wednesday, saying Iraq's current Shiite leaders should be on trial for trying to kill him and Saddam in the 1980s. The 70-year-old Aziz, who appeared in public for the first time since the 2003 U.S. led-invasion, during which he turned himself in to American forces, is the most famous Saddam-era figure to take the stand so far in the 7-month-old trial.
  • The White House said Wednesday the establishment of Iraq's new government was an opportunity to reassess the need for American military forces. Iraq will be a primary topic when President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair meet on Thursday. "I do not believe that you're going to hear the president or the prime minister say we're going to be out in one year, two years, four years I just don't think you're going to get any specific prediction of troops withdrawals," spokesman Tony Snow said.
  • Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said Wednesday that Iraqi forces are capable of taking control of security throughout the country within 18 months, but still need more recruits, training and equipment.
  • Drive-by shootings killed 17 people, including a provincial official in northern Iraq and two of his bodyguards, and authorities found the bodies of nine people who apparently had been kidnapped and tortured. On Tuesday, bombings and drive-by shootings killed 41 Iraqis.

    The United States has about 131,000 troops in Iraq; officials have said they would like to have about 100,000 by year's end. Britain has about 8,000. At least 2,460 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the war. Britain has lost 106 service personnel.

    The White House dampened expectations of troop reductions in Iraq or specific dates for cutbacks coming out of the Bush-Blair meeting.

    "You know, there aren't going to be people kissing in Times Square tomorrow. But I do think what you will have is a very forward-leaning set of discussions about how to proceed forward," Snow said.

    Mr. Bush has described the formation of Iraq's new government of Shiites, Sunni Arabs and Kurds as a turning point. But it's unclear what that means in terms of the need for U.S. troops. Pentagon officials are worried about the reliability of U.S.-trained Iraqi police and their religious and tribal allegiances.

    Gen. Peter Schoomaker, the Army chief of staff, said his service is planning for the possibility of having to maintain current troop levels in Iraq for the next two years, while also anticipating the possibility of cuts.

    Of the 131,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, about 105,000 to 110,000 are Army soldiers.

    Schoomaker, in remarks to a group of reporters on Thursday, said Army planners are looking 18 to 24 months into the future to determine how they can provide the number and types of troops required in Iraq.

    "We're continuing to plan for a variety of troop levels," he said. "Obviously we're planning to be able to sustain the levels that we have today, but we're running alternatives as well, in anticipation that we'll be asked to do some different levels."

    Eager to look in charge, Iraq's new leaders are publicly pressing for Mr. Bush and Blair to move toward troop withdrawals while privately seeking assurances from U.S. diplomats and military leaders that the troops won't leave prematurely.

    Blair planned to raise with Mr. Bush Iraqi plans for an international conference to back its government British officials said.

    British officials have said most coalition troops could be withdrawn by 2010, but no timetable is to be agreed upon during the talks, Blair's Downing Street office said.

    "What we need is a situation where, if the conditions are right, we can pull back our troops and then withdraw them. That conditions-based approach will guide everything we do," Blair's spokesman said.

    Snow said Iraq's new government "creates new opportunities; it really changes things, because now you have people with whom you're going to deal on a regular, daily, and for the foreseeable future, a permanent basis until you have changes of government there, to deal with all of the key issues, not only political, but also military.

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