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Iraq wants US
troops to stay for 3 years
Foreign Desk Report
PARIS—Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said on Thursday U.S. troops should
remain in Iraq for up to three more years to enable the local
authorities to develop their own security forces. At the start of a
week-long visit to France, Talabani rejected suggestions Iraq had
descended into civil war and accused the media of focusing exclusively
on negative stories.
However, he said “international terrorists” were still concentrating all
their efforts in Iraq which meant the country needed outside help to
defeat them. “We need time. Not 20 years, but time. I personally can say
that two to three years will be enough to build up our forces and say to
our American friends ‘Bye bye with thanks’,” Talabani told a conference
organised by the IFRI think-tank.
Public pressure is building in both the United States and Britain to
bring back troops from Iraq. U.S. President George W. Bush’s Republicans
face possible loss of control of Congress in November 7 elections, with
dismay over his Iraq policy a critical factor in voter intentions.
However, Talabani gave an upbeat assessment of the situation in Iraq,
saying life was relatively normal beyond Baghdad.
“There is no civil war. The media is focusing only on the negative side
of Iraq. ... We need to give the real picture. It’s not just car bombs.
Visit Iraq from the north to the south. Never mind Baghdad,” he told
reporters. Very few French journalists venture into Iraq nowadays after
three French reporters were kidnapped between 2004-2005 and held for
months before eventually being allowed home.
The Iraqi Interior Ministry said more than 40 civilians died each day
last month as a result of the political violence and the New York Times
this week quoted the U.S. military as saying Iraq was descending into
chaos. Talabani angrily shrugged off the suggestion. “The Pentagon can
say what it likes,” he said, cutting short the questioner. Talabani is
due to meet French President Jacques Chirac later on Thursday to ask for
help with the rebuilding effort. “I will ask (Chirac) to continue his
support and extend the relation both politically and for trade. I will
ask him to help us train some Iraqi police forces for use against
terrorism,” the Iraqi leader said.
Chirac vehemently opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003
that toppled Saddam Hussein but France has since patched up relations
with Washington and promised to help the new Iraqi government.
Talabani said Iraq was willing to strike new oil deals with France but
repeated that it would not necessarily honor contracts forged by
Saddam’s regime.
“Your oil companies can come to Iraq ... Americans didn’t interfere (in
our oil) and don’t have any right to interfere,” he said when asked if
the United States would shut the door on French companies because of
Chirac’s opposition to the war.
At least 119 Iraqi policemen were killed in shootings, abductions and
bomb attacks last month, the Interior Ministry said Thursday,
underscoring the toll Iraq’s relentless violence is inflicting on the
poorly trained and underequipped force. Iraqi President Jalal Talabani
said on a trip to France that it would take his country two or three
years to set up its own security forces and send U.S.-led troops home.
The U.S. military said, meanwhile, that it had killed a mid-ranking
member of al-Qaida in Iraq and his driver in an air strike in Ramadi.
And Iraqi police said gunmen killed the Shiite dean of Baghdad
University’s school of administration and economics along with his wife
and son on Thursday, four days after the murder of a prominent Sunni
academic.—Agencies |