Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi announced his plan Tuesday to
withdraw troops from Iraq at a ruling party meeting, an official said, moving to
end Japan's largest military mission since World War II.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of party protocol,
said Koizumi told a meeting of the Liberal Democratic Party that he would make a
public announcement of the pullout later in the day.
Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi arrives at the prime minister's official
residence in Tokyo, Tuesday morning, June 20, 2006.
[AP] |
"We've finished this chapter," Kyodo News agency quoted Koizumi as telling
party executives.
Japan has about 600 troops in the city of Samawah in southern Iraq. Although
the mission is strictly non-combat and humanitarian, the deployment broke new
ground as a symbol of Tokyo's more assertive military policy of recent years.
The move was prompted by the announcement on Monday that Britain and
Australia would hand over responsibility for security to Iraqi forces in Iraq's
southern Muthana province, where the Japanese troops are based.
Concerns have been high in Japan that the troops could be drawn into the
fighting in Iraq, and the shift in security responsibility was apparently being
taken as a chance by Tokyo to withdraw.
All major Japanese newspapers reported Tuesday morning that Koizumi would
announce Japan's troop withdrawal after meeting with ruling and opposition party
leaders to obtain consent, followed by a final decision by the government's
national security meeting.
Defense Chief Fukushiro Nukaga will then issue an order for the withdrawal to
begin later Tuesday, for a planned completion by the end of July, the Yomiuri
newspaper reported.
Koizumi said in a televised news conference Monday that he wanted the
withdrawal to be smooth and coordinated with Iraqi authorities. He also said
Japan would continue to provide support for Iraq after the withdrawal.
The military mission has had only tepid support among the Japanese public,
which has voiced concern about the safety of troops in Iraq and the possibility
that the dispatch would make Japan a target of terrorists.
Foreign Minister Taro Aso, Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe and Nukaga also
met Monday to discuss the withdrawal and agreed to begin moving Japanese troops
out after Iraqi authorities move toward taking over responsibility for security
in the area from British forces, Nukaga said.