LONDON - Iraq's defense minister said Wednesday his commanders were surprised
when Britain recently announced plans to withdraw some of its troops from Iraq,
but that his country's forces will be ready to replace them.
Iraq's Defense Minister Abdul-Qader Mohammed Jassim speaks
during his news conference in London Wednesday, March 21, 2007. [AP]
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"I am absolutely confident that
Iraq's army is quite ready to meet the challenges, even if the withdrawal
becomes quite sudden," Defense Minister Abdul-Qader Mohammed Jassim said at a
news conference.
On Tuesday, Iraqi forces in southern Iraq replaced British troops at a
frequently targeted base in Basra.
The British commander, Maj. Gen. Jonathan Shaw, said the move was part of the
plan to shift most security responsibilities to the Iraqis. He said his soldiers
would now enter the streets of the oil port city only in exceptional
circumstances.
Last month, Prime Minister Tony Blair announced that Britain will reduce its
force in Iraq from 7,100 to 5,500 in the coming months.
Some 125 British personnel have died in Iraq since the US-led invasion four
years ago.
During his news conference at the Iraqi Embassy in London, Jassim said 2007
will be a crucial year for the ongoing training of Iraq's army so it can operate
independently, without the routine support it now requires from coalition
soldiers, artillery and air forces.
He said Iraqi commanders in southern Iraq were "surprised by the British
announcing they would pull out 1,600 soldiers from Basra," and responded by
moving forward by several months a timetable to bring a new brigade of about
5,000 Iraqi soldiers into the southern city.
But Jassim also said Blair's government has made it clear that "the departure
of the British is dependent on the readiness of the Iraqis."
The defense minister said Iraq's military is still struggling to replace the
logistics, communication and transportation equipment it had before the fall of
Saddam Hussein, and he urged withdrawing British forces to leave their bases and
equipment behind for Iraq's army.
On another issue, Jassim said Iraq's government is conducting "daily and
behind-the-scenes negotiations" with some insurgent groups, except al-Qaida in
Iraq or any militants allied with it.
Jassim, a member of Iraq's Sunni-Arab minority, said he hopes such channels
of communication will one day lead to agreements with insurgents. But he said
such groups must stop killing Iraqi civilians in suicide bombings and other
attacks, and support Iraq's democratically-elected government.