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Foreign troops could quit Iraq early 2007: Report
(AFP)
Updated: 2006-03-06 10:21

US-led coalition forces plan to quit Iraq in early 2007, as at least four people were killed in bombings and clashes in the strife-torn country.

British soldiers secure an area while conducting a security operation in the Iraqi southern city of Basra, on February 16. US-led coalition forces plan to quit Iraq in early 2007, as at least four people were killed in bombings and clashes in the strife-torn country. [AFP]

Three men guarding a Sunni mosque in Baghdad were shot dead overnight when gunmen dressed in police uniforms attacked the building, an interior ministry official said, with six more guards wounded in the ensuing firefight.

News of the unrest, including an Iraqi soldier killed in a suicide car bombing at a checkpoint in Mahmudiya, south of the capital, came amid persistent reports that foreign troops would soon leave the country.

Two British newspapers, the Sunday Telegraph and Sunday Mirror, quoting unnamed senior British Army sources, said the coalition intended to reduce its presence on the ground over the next 12 months, while withdrawing forces into bases, and then pull out all remaining troops simultaneously.

Washington and London believe that maintaining their military presence is counter-productive as foreign forces are increasingly viewed as occupation troops, even though they remain at the Iraqi government's request, the papers said.

But a US military spokesman in Baghdad Sunday dismissed the report of a deadline for a US troop pull-out.

"The news report on a withdrawal of forces within a set timeframe is completely false," said Lieutenant-Colonel Barry Johnson.

"As we've said over and over again, any withdrawal will be linked to the ability of the Iraqi security forces to maintain domestic order on behalf of a representative Iraqi government that respects the rights of all its citizens. This is an ongoing assessment and not linked to any timeframe," he added.
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