Iranen#39;s influence? You can hear it on Iraqi streets

Iranen#39;s influence? You can hear it on Iraqi streets

Iranen#39;s influence? You can hear it on Iraqi streets
Read Full Story

Iraq cabinet draws conclusions on U.S. troop draft

11.11.2008 - Iraq - Comments [0]


BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Iraq's cabinet has drawn its conclusions on a final U.S. draft of a security pact that would require American troops to leave by the end of 2011, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's media adviser said on Monday.

Adviser Yasin Majeed declined to say what the Iraqi cabinet's response to the draft was, but said it had been passed on to the presidency council, a body made up of President Jalal Talabani and his two vice presidents.

The action means a final decision could come soon on a pact that Baghdad and Washington are scrambling to enact in time to replace a U.N. Security Council mandate governing the U.S. presence in Iraq, which is due to expire at year-end.

A senior Shi'ite politician, whose bloc asked to delay the pact last month, suggested his followers were now more amenable to it after the election of Barack Obama -- who favors withdrawing troops -- to replace President George W. Bush.

"Our response to the U.S. amendments of the security pact has been delivered to the Presidency Council tonight," Majeed told Reuters. He said the presidency council would pass the draft on to the speaker of parliament and his two deputy speakers. Parliament must approve it for it to take effect.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Robert Wood said: "We have not yet received an official response from the government of Iraq."

The United States sent Maliki the latest text last week in response to a last-minute Iraqi request for changes to an agreement that had been hammered out over months. U.S. officials have said the text is final and not open to further changes.

REQUESTED CHANGES

The text calls for U.S. forces to leave Iraq by the end of 2011 and to move off the streets of towns and villages by the middle of next year. Iraqi officials have said the final U.S. version includes some but not all of 110 changes they requested.

The pact was blocked at the last minute last month by powerful Shi'ite parties in Maliki's ruling coalition who demanded amendments, such as removing language that allowed Iraq to request U.S. forces to stay longer than three years.

Many of the Shi'ite parties have historic ties to Iran, which strongly opposed the pact. But Shi'ites may be warming to the latest U.S. draft.

"There is an understanding that we may go forward with the pact," Hadi al-Ameri, head of the powerful Badr organization, a key part of Maliki's ruling Shi'ite coalition, told Reuters on Monday.

Ameri said Obama's victory had helped convince his followers that the United States would fulfill the commitment to withdraw its troops according to the schedule in the pact.

Obama campaigned on a promise to withdraw combat troops within 16 months of taking office, while his opponent, John McCain, opposed setting a timetable.

"Obama's idea to withdraw from Iraq coincides with our point of view on scheduling the troops' withdrawal," he said. "Iraqi politicians would not have felt reassured that the Americans would withdraw within a specified time if McCain had won."

(Writing by Peter Graff; editing by Michael Roddy)

Source

Post a comment
Name 
E-Mail
Comment
Enter the code from image

See also:

Barcelona to face Beckham''s Galaxy on U.S. tour

Champions League finalists Barcelona will play against David Beckham''s Los Angeles Galaxy as part of a tour of the United States in August

Melody withdraws offer from Wael Kfoury

Melody withdraws offer from Wael Kfoury

Iraq: Trial of shoe thrower delayed

Iraq: Trial of shoe thrower delayed

At least three die in Iraq attacks

At least three die in Iraq attacks

Iraq: Former Speaker hails shoe thrower

Iraq: Former Speaker hails shoe thrower

Generated in 1.173 sec