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LONDON, Dec. 18 (Xinhuanet) -- Former US Secretary of
State Colin Powell has said it would take some year for the United States to
withdraw its troops from Iraq although the pullout could start in 2006.
"So one way or the other, I think a draw down will
begin in 2006, but essentially just to walk away, to say that we're taking all
of our troops out as fast as we can would be a tragic mistake. It's going to be
years," Powell said in an interview with the BBC World TV Channel on Sunday.
US military actions against Iraq have led to the loss
of 2,140 of its troops since the war started in March 2003 on the excuse that
Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction, which has proved to be
untrue.
Powell accepted that Washington's moral authority was
under pressure at the moment and that the US is going through a period right now
"where public opinion world-wide is against us.""I think that's a function of
some of the policies we have followed in recent years with respect to Iraq and
in not solving the Middle East's problem and perhaps the way in which we have
communicated our views to the rest of the world," he said. "We have created an
impression that we are unilateralist, we don'tcare what the rest of the world
thinks."
The former secretary of state said he was "deeply
disappointed" in what the intelligence community had presented.
"What really upset me more than anything else was
that there were people in the intelligence community that had doubts about some
of this sourcing, but those doubts never surfaced up to us,"he said. Enditem
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