
Baghdad: June 26, 2009 - Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki has taken to calling the withdrawal of American combat troops from Iraq’s cities by next Tuesday a “great victory,” a repulsion of foreign occupiers he compares to the rebellion against British troops in 1920.
And the Americans are going along with it, symbolically and substantively.
American commanders have hewed far more closely to the June 30 deadline for withdrawing combat forces from Iraq’s cities than expected only a few weeks ago, according to American and Iraqi officials.
They have closed outposts — even in Baghdad and still-troubled Mosul in the north — that they had initially lobbied the Iraqis to keep open, having concluded, the officials said, that pressing the case would be counterproductive given the political significance that Mr. Maliki had given the deadline.
The day itself has been declared a national holiday, though it is not yet clear whether Iraq will hold the “feast and festivals” he recently promised.
American and Iraqi officials acknowledge the risks — to Mr. Maliki’s political position and to Iraqis’ safety.
On Wednesday, four days after the last American base in Sadr City closed, a bomb hidden on a motorcycle cart killed at least 76 people and wounded more than 150 in a market in the neighborhood. On Thursday, at least seven bombs exploded around the country in what appeared to be a message from extremists days before the deadline.
A great deal of Mr. Maliki’s political support rests on the fact that violence has declined since the carnage of 2006 and 2007, that he has rebuilt the security forces, that he has presided over the beginning of the end of the American war. He rarely mentions any American role in the improved security in Iraq — though 130,000 American troops remain in the country.
“We will not ask them to intervene in combat operations related to maintaining public order,” he said in an interview with Le Monde published last week. “It is finished.”
With the deadline now only days away, a drastically reshaped American military posture has emerged, largely because of Mr. Maliki’s insistence.
Bases built over months and years have been dismantled, often in weeks. The once ubiquitous presence of American armored vehicles on Baghdad’s streets has largely ended. More
Clinton welcomes Israel’s Move to Ease Tension with the US
Mar 19, 2010
Kidnappers free British boy Sahil Saeed 'after ransom payment'
Mar 16, 2010
New Delhi may advise Indians to leave Kabul
Mar 11, 2010
Iran to Build More Enrichment Plants
Feb 22, 2010
God Believers urge President Obama to review his policy of Drones to Pakistan
Feb 21, 2010
God Believers join Clinton - Consider Iran heading toward Twin Dictatorship
Feb 15, 2010
Is America heading toward gaining political stability? Dr. Raj Baldev, Cosmo Theorist
Feb 9, 2010
Obama’s Tactical Challenge to Republicans on Health Care: Dr. Raj Baldev, Cosmo Theorist
Feb 8, 2010
American’s recession reflecting Investors in Europe
Feb 5, 2010
Differences between China and America may get wider – Advantage India
Feb 4, 2010
God Believers appreciate Obama’s new proposals may benefit America in long run
Feb 1, 2010
Obama gets tougher with Iran, deploys new defenses
Jan 31, 2010
Pak wants 'moderate Taliban' in Afghan govt
Jan 29, 2010
End “Tired Old Battles” that divided country :Obama
Jan 28, 2010
God Believers urge UN to Prevent abuse of human rights to Ashraf Camp in Iraq
Jan 22, 2010