WASHINGTON - The independent panel studying US policy in Iraq has unanimously
agreed to a report that will call for a gradual pullback of American combat
troops in Iraq but stops short of setting a firm timetable for withdrawal, The
New York Times reported on Wednesday.
President George W. Bush at a meeting with the Baker-Hamilton
Commission in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. The panel studying US
policy in Iraq has reached a consensus agreement and will release its
conclusions on December 6. [Reuters]
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The commission is to release its
conclusions on December 6 in a report that could help guide US President George
W. Bush's conduct of the war.
Citing people familiar with the panel's deliberations, the Times said the
Iraq Study Group will recommend that Bush make it clear that he would start the
troop withdrawal "relatively soon," indicating sometime next year.
That recommendation would be a compromise between calls from some Democrats
for a timetable to withdraw the nearly 140,000 U.S. forces in Iraq and Bush's
insistence that forces should remain until the mission to stabilize Iraq was
completed.
The Times said the report did not state whether the 15 combat brigades making
up most of the U.S. fighting forces in Iraq would be brought home or pulled back
to bases in Iraq or neighboring countries.
But the pullback of the 15 combat brigades could still leave more than 70,000
American trainers, logistics experts and members of a rapid reaction force in
Iraq, the Times said.
Recommendations of panel, which is co-chaired by former Secretary of State
James Baker -- a close Bush family friend -- and former Democratic congressman
Lee Hamilton -- are just advisory. But a unanimous recommendation will be much
harder for Bush to resist than if the group were divided, experts and study
group advisers say.
Hamilton earlier told the liberal Center for American Progress: "We reached a
consensus," but gave no details.
Bush is under mounting political pressure to change policies in Iraq. His
fellow Republicans lost control of the U.S. Congress earlier this month largely
because of public dissatisfaction over the war. Since the March 2003 U.S.-led
invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, 2,885 U.S. force members have died.
Much of the Iraq Study Group's report focused on recommending a more
aggressive U.S. diplomatic initiative in the Middle East, including directly
engaging Iran and Syria, the newspaper said.
Those contacts could start with a regional conference on Iraq or broader
Middle East issues such as the Israeli-Palestinian situation, it said.
The Bush administration, which accuses Iran and Syria of fueling the
insurgency in Iraq, has been reluctant to hold talks with either government.
Iran and Syria have denied fanning the violence.
In his earlier remarks, Hamilton made a strong case for America talking with
its adversaries, which Bush has resisted in the cases of Syria and Iran.
"I don't see how you solve problems" without talking, Hamilton
said.