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Related story: UK to pull out troops from Iraq next May: report
LONDON, Sept. 25 (Xinhuanet) -- British Prime
Minister Tony Blair said Sunday he had not set an "arbitrary date" for pulling
British soldiers out of Iraq.
Any exit strategy "depends on the job being done,"
Blair told the BBC.
The strategy for withdrawal had
always been to "retire as the Iraqi capability builds up," said Blair, who is in
Brighton, southern coast of England, for the annual conference of his Labor
Party.
"What we do depends on the job being done. There is
no arbitrary date that's being set and the allies are all in exactly the same
position," he said.
"Our mandate there from the UN is to stay there for
as long as the Iraqi government wants us and as long as it takes to build up the
capability of the Iraqi forces," Blair added.
"There is no doubt in my mind at all that what is
happening in Iraq now is crucial for the future of our own security, never the
security of Iraq or the greater Middle East," he said. "It is crucial for the
security of the world. If they are defeated - this type of global terrorism and
insurgency in Iraq - we will defeat them everywhere."
Blair made the remarks while responding to a report
on Sunday by The Observer newspaper, which said that British troops will start a
major withdrawal from Iraq next May according to detailed plans to be published
next month.
According to the newspaper, the plans drawn up by
Britain and the United States will be presented to the Iraqi parliament in
October.
Britain, a staunch US ally in the Iraq war, has some
8,500 troops positioned in Iraq, with most of them based in the south of the
country near Basra. Enditem |