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IRAQ WARS
Obama foes blast Iraq withdrawal amid Iran worries
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 21, 2011

Top US senator backs Obama Iraq move
Washington (AFP) Oct 21, 2011 - US Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Friday he fully backed President Barack Obama's decision to withdraw all US forces from Iraq by the end of the year and played down worries about Iran.

"I fully support the president," the Democratic lawmaker told reporters on a conference call, saying the White House had briefed him on the decision in a telephone call earlier in the day.

Reid -- who drew fire in April 2007 for saying of Iraq that "this war is lost" -- said the United States was "keeping a real close eye on Iran" and would be "well equipped" to do so even after the withdrawal.

Iran was "way behind (the) times," he said, warning leaders in Tehran that the storm of "Arab Spring" pro-democracy movements that have swept aside authoritarian regimes in the Middle East this year would soon reach them.

"They should be aware that the spring that hit all of that part of the world is about to hit them," he said.

Reid's comments came after Obama announced the full withdrawal of troops as talks between the two sides to agree on keeping a small number of US troops in Iraq after the end of 2011 failed.

The move represents the fulfillment of a central promise of Obama's 2008 election campaign, and came as Washington sought to also draw down the size of its garrison in Afghanistan.


President Barack Obama's conservative critics on Friday blasted his announcement that all US troops will leave Iraq by year's end, citing worries US archnemesis Iran will fill the vacuum.

Republican Senator John McCain, Obama's rival for the White House in 2008, described the news as a "consequential failure" for Obama as well as Iraq's leaders after talks broke down on leaving a small US force beyond December 31.

"This decision will be viewed as a strategic victory for our enemies in the Middle East, especially the Iranian regime, which has worked relentlessly to ensure a full withdrawal of US troops from Iraq," he said.

Frederick Kagan, widely seen as the intellectual architect of the 2007 US troop "surge" credited in Washington with pulling Iraq from the brink of civil war, echoed the charge.

"The withdrawal of American military protection from a state helpless to defend itself on its own effectively throws Iraq into the arms of Iran, however the Iraqis feel about the matter," he wrote in a blog post.

Talks on extending the US presence broke down because the two sides were unable to agree on granting legal immunity for American troops who would have stayed in place to help train Iraqi forces and to counter Iran.

Republicans have watched worriedly as top Iraqi officials and their Iranian counterparts have stepped up diplomatic contacts in the wake of the 2003 US-led invasion to topple the late dictator Saddam Hussein.

Democrats have argued it was the invasion itself that ended Iraq's role as a historic bulwark against Iran, with which it fought a devastating 1980-88 war, and noted that the December 2011 withdrawal date was central to a US-Iraq accord signed in 2008 under Republican president George W. Bush.

And they emphasized that Iraq, where some leading political leaders have expressed anger about Iranian "meddling" in the strife-torn country's internal affairs, is a sovereign state.

"The United States is fulfilling our agreement with an Iraqi government that wants to shape its own future," said Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry, a Democrat.

"I fully support the president," Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told reporters on a conference call in which he also played down fears that the US withdrawal would embolden Tehran.

Reid -- who drew fire in April 2007 for saying of Iraq that "this war is lost" -- said the United States was "keeping a real close eye on Iran" and would be "well equipped" to do so even after the withdrawal.

Iran is "way behind (the) times," he said, warning leaders in Tehran that the storm of "Arab Spring" pro-democracy movements that have swept aside authoritarian regimes in the Middle East this year would soon reach them.

"They should be aware that the spring that hit all of that part of the world is about to hit them," he said.

Republican House Speaker John Boehner offered a measured appraisal that urged Obama to "continue engaging with the Iraqi government in a way that ensures our hard-fought gains translate into long-term success."

"While I'm concerned that a full withdrawal could jeopardize those gains, I'm hopeful that both countries will work together to guarantee that a free and democratic Iraq remains a strong and stable partner for the United States in the Middle East," Boehner said in a statement.

And Obama got an unexpected vote of confidence from former Bush press secretary Ari Fleischer, who said on his Twitter feed that the "decision on Iraq is right one."

"I was open 2 staying if he made the case it wld help w Iran, but Iraq war is over. It's time," said Fleischer.

But Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, angrily assailed Obama's "astonishing failure" to keep a residual US force in Iraq.

"The unavoidable question is whether this decision is the result of a naked political calculation or simply sheer ineptitude in negotiations with the Iraqi government," he said.

The issue was unlikely to shape Obama's bid for a second term in November 2012 elections: Poll after poll of public opinion has found barely five percent of Americans view the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as their number one issue.

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US war in Iraq marked by blunders, setbacks
Washington (AFP) Oct 21, 2011 - President Barack Obama on Friday announced all US troops would leave Iraq by year's end, after a nearly nine-year mission that was plagued by strategic blunders and a notorious prisoner abuse scandal.

Here are key moments and decisions that helped define the US war:

2003

March 20: The United States invades Iraq with a small ground force of roughly 120,000, despite concerns from top commanders that several hundred thousand troops would be required.

President George W. Bush's defense secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, resists sending two additional divisions to contain violence immediately after the regime falls.

But he eventually has to deploy tens of thousands of reinforcements in the face of sectarian bloodshed and a growing insurgency. Military officers later blamed Rumsfeld for failing to take into account the challenges of maintaining security after the fall of the regime.

May 1: Bush announces the end of major combat operations in front of a "Mission Accomplished" banner aboard an aircraft carrier. But violence steadily escalates, with roadside bombs taking a terrible toll on Iraqis and American troops.

May 23: US special envoy L. Paul Bremer issues a decree disbanding the Iraqi military, in a bid to counter Saddam Hussein's loyalists in the Baath party. But the move is blamed for feeding an insurgency with bitter, unemployed and armed Baathists.

Bremer's decision takes many by surprise in the military and the White House. Pre-war plans had called for dissolving only elite Republican Guard units while retaining much of the 300,000-strong army. By the summer, US-led coalition troops are fighting large numbers of former Iraqi army soldiers.

2004:

April 28: Photographs of US forces humiliating and abusing inmates at Abu Ghraib prison cause worldwide outrage, severely damaging the US image in Muslim countries. No prison sentences are handed down to senior commanders in the case.

2007:

January 10: In an attempt to turn the tide, Bush orders a "surge" of 30,000 additional troops despite mounting public opposition to the war at home and high casualties.

The "surge" strategy is led by a new commander, General David Petraeus -- an impassioned advocate of counter-insurgency tactics that are embraced across the armed forces.

The influx of troops coincides with a backlash among Sunni tribes -- dubbed the "Sunni awakening" -- against Al-Qaeda-linked fighters and their brutal attacks on civilians.

The number of roadside bombs and insurgent attacks declines dramatically over the next two years. In Washington, Petraeus is credited by many lawmakers with rescuing the war effort but the legacy of the surge remains open to debate.

2008

November 27: Iraq's parliament ratifies a security agreement that calls for US troops to withdraw from the country by the end of 2011.

2011

October 21: Obama announces that US forces, numbering around 39,000, would be withdrawn by the end of the year, after a nearly nine-year campaign and 4,400 American fatalities.



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