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US to cede Iraq security next year
Middle Ease Desk Report
AMMAN (Jordan)—President Bush said Thursday the United States will speed
a turnover of security responsibility to Iraqi forces but assured Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki that Washington is not looking for a “graceful
exit” from a war well into its fourth violent year.
Under intensifying political pressure at home, the American and Iraqi
leaders came together for a hastily arranged summit to explore how to
stop escalating violence that is tearing Iraq apart and eroding support
for Bush’s war strategy.
With Bush hoping to strengthen his Iraqi counterpart’s fragile
government, the tensions that flared when their opening session was
abruptly cancelled Wednesday evening were not apparent when they
appeared before reporters after breakfast Thursday.
“ I appreciate the courage you show during these difficult times as you
lead your country,” Bush told al-Maliki after nearly two and a half
hours of talks. “He’s the right guy for Iraq.” It was their third
face-to-face meeting since al-Maliki took power about six months ago.
“There is no problem,” declared al-Maliki.
There were no immediate answers for mending the Shiite-Sunni divide that
is fueling sectarian bloodshed in Iraq or taming the stubborn insurgency
against the U.S. presence. The leaders emerged from their breakfast and
formal session with few specific ideas, particularly on Bush’s repeated
pledge to move more quickly to transfer authority for Iraq’s security to
al-Maliki’s government. “One of his frustrations with me is that he
believes that we’ve been slow about giving him the tools necessary to
protect the Iraqi people,” Bush said. “He doesn’t have the capacity to
respond. So we want to accelerate that capacity.”
There was no explanation from either side of how that would happen,
beyond support for the long-standing goals of speeding the U.S.
military’s effort to train Iraqi security forces and to give more
military authority over Iraq to al-Maliki.
A senior al-Maliki aide who attended Thursday’s talks said the Iraqi
leader presented Bush a blueprint for the equipping and training of
Iraqi security forces. The aide, who spoke anonymously because of the
sensitive nature of the information, declined to give details.
The November elections that handed control of Congress to Democrats have
given rise to heightened calls for the about 140,000 American soldiers
in Iraq to begin coming home. Bush acknowledged that pressure and said
he wanted to start troop withdrawals as soon as possible. Still, he
insisted the U.S. will stay “until the job is complete.”
“I know there’s a lot of speculation that these reports in Washington
mean there’s going to be some kind of graceful exit out of Iraq,” he
said. “This business about a graceful exit just simply has no realism to
it at all.” The president added: “I’m a realist because I understand how
tough it is inside of Iraq.”
Thursday’s meetings were supposed to be Bush’s second set of strategy
sessions in the Jordanian capital. But the first meeting between Bush
and al-Maliki, scheduled for Wednesday night along with Jordan’s king,
was scrubbed.
Accounts varied as to why, but it followed the leak of a classified
White House memo critical of al-Maliki and a boycott of the Iraqi
leader’s government in Baghdad. Thirty Iraqi lawmakers and five cabinet
ministers loyal to anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said they were
suspending participation in Parliament and the government to protest al-Maliki’s
decision to meet with Bush.
Bush said al-Maliki “discussed with me his political situation,” but he
declined to step publicly into delicate internal Iraqi matters.
Privately, Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice repeatedly
pressed the Iraqi prime minister to disband a heavily armed Shiite
militia loyal to al-Sadr and blamed for much of the country’s sectarian
violence, according to the senior al-Maliki aide.
The official quoted al-Maliki as telling Bush that controlling the group
“is not a big problem and we will find a solution for it.” Al-Sadr is a
key al-Maliki political backer and the prime minister has regularly
sidestepped U.S. demands to deal with the Mahdi Army. Before the
cameras, Al-Maliki sent the protesting forces at home a message. |