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Sep 10 2008
US redeploys troops to Afghanistan | Print |  E-mail
Arab World
By Agencies   

At least 8,000 will be out of Iraq by February 2009
At least 8,000 will be out of Iraq by February 2009
George Bush, the US president, has announced 8,000 troops will be pulled out of Iraq over the coming months and 4,500 sent to Afghanistan by January.

"While the enemy in Iraq is still dangerous, we have seized the offensive, and Iraqi forces are becoming increasingly capable of leading and winning the fight," he said in a speech in Washington DC on Tuesday.

"Attacks by the Taliban have increased over the past two years," Bush said at the National Defence University.

Bush said Afghan soldiers were "courageous" but "needed help" and that it was important to rebuild educational, agricultural infrastructures in the country.

He said success in Afghanistan was "critical for America and people of the free world".

Voters' anger

A reduction of 8,000 soldiers would leave 138,000 US government troops in Iraq and there are currently 33,000 in Afghanistan.

That will still be more than before Bush ordered a "surge" of extra forces in 2007 and also more than in November 2006, when his Republicans lost mid-term congressional elections largely due to voter anger over the war.
  
Bush's plan follows recommendations from senior US defence officials, including Robert Gates, the defence secretary, Mike Mullen, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and David Petraeus, the top commander in Iraq.   
  
Obama has promised to withdraw US troops from Iraq within 16 months and said he would put more resources into Afghanistan and "anti-terrorism efforts" along the Pakistan border, where US officials say they believe Osama bin Laden, the al-Qaeda leader, is hiding.
  
McCain has refused any set any timeline for withdrawing troops from Iraq.

He has said he prefers Bush's policy of removing them based on commanders' recommendations and security conditions in the war zone.
  
'Fragile and irreversible'

Bush's "surge" strategy, which sent an additional 30,000 troops to Iraq, has helped stem violence and pulled Iraq back from the brink of civil war, according to White House officials.

The so-called "surge," which was announced in 2007, was criticised by many Democrats who said the US should be pulling out of the country.
   
While violence has fallen in Iraq, attacks against US, Nato and Afghan troops in Afghanistan have soared.

Nato commanders there have asked for additional forces for years and say they still need about 12,000 troops.
  
The US has 33,000 troops in Afghanistan, split between a Nato-led mission and a separate "counter-terrorism" mission run by the Pentagon.

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