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WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 (Xinhuanet)
-- The number of American and other foreign soldiers in Iraq would fall to below
100,000 by the end of this year and an overwhelming majority would be out of the
country in two years, The New York Times reported Tuesday, citing the chairman
of a high-level group planning the transfer of security responsibilities from
American to Iraqi troops.
The statements of Mowattak al-Rubaie, Iraq's national
security adviser and chairman of a joint Iraq-American committee planning the
transfer, gave the strongest indication yet that the Bush administration was
preparing to carry out significant reductions in U.S. forces over the current
year, the report said.
The committee comprised Rubaie, George Casey, the top
U.S. command in Iraq, and Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq,
according to the report.
There are now about 160,000 foreign troops in Iraq,
about 140,000 of them American, with the rest coming from Britain, Italy, Poland
and a number of other countries.
The planning for a troop withdrawal coincided with a
classifiedassessment being conducted by the Bush administration of what the
American presence in Iraq and Afghanistan should look like throughthe Bush
presidency and beyond, envisioning a day when American forces and large-scale
American aid are greatly diminished in the two countries, the report said.
The assessment by the Iraq and Afghanistan Joint
Transition Planning Group was focused not on the timing of troop withdrawals but
on the mechanics of making the switch from a large military presence to a more
traditional relationship run by American embassies, and how to do that while
maintaining Washington's political leverage but at far less cost, the report
quoted several State and Defense Department officials as saying.
By contrast, the working group in Iraq was addressing
the delicate question of timing, and Rubaie asserted strongly in an interview
with the newspaper that major reductions were planned.
According to the condition-based agreement, Rubaie
was quoted as saying, the multinational forces would be reduced to fewer than
100,000 by the end of the year, and by the end of 2007, the overwhelming
majority of foreign forces in Iraq would have left the country.
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