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Geoff Morrell: Iraq
Withdrawal Plans on Schedule
By Meredith Buel
March 4, 2010
Pentagon press
secretary Geoff Morrell said Wednesday only an extraordinarily dire
deterioration in security in Iraq would prompt the U.S. to slow down the
planned withdrawal of troops from the country. Morrell made the remarks
on the same day a series of suicide bombings killed at least 31 people
in the northern Iraqi city of Baquba.
Pentagon Press Secretary
Geoff Morrell
The bombings come just days before
Iraqis are scheduled to vote in parliamentary elections and officials
say many of those killed in the attack were policemen sent to help
secure the area for the vote.
Officials say the first two bombers drove cars packed with explosives
and struck near government buildings and police stations.
A third attacker rode in an ambulance with victims of the first two
bombings and blew himself up at the city's emergency hospital.
Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell denounced the attacks, but said
they will not disrupt the March 7 elections.
"So, no, it's disgraceful," said Geoff Morrell. "It's deplorable. And we
strongly condemn it. And our hearts go out to the victims of this
attack. That said, neither this attack nor any of the previous attempts
to derail the electoral process and to destabilize the government have
been or will be successful. Nor do we anticipate that it will derail our
responsible drawdown of forces in Iraq."
There are currently about 96,000 U.S. troops in Iraq.
Morrell says the Pentagon plans to keep that number in the country
through the elections and the weeks that follow to help provide a
security environment conducive for a peaceful transfer of power.
The press secretary says once that has been established, the U.S. is
prepared for a dramatic draw down in military forces.
Spc. Christian Duran, an
infantryman assigned to Company B, 4-9th Infantry, 4th Stryker Brigade
Combat Team, 2ID, greets an Iraqi soldier guarding one of the polling
sites March 1 near the Kandahri marketplace during a U.S. patrol prior
to elections.
"I mean, all I can tell you is that everything suggests at this point,
despite the bombing in Baquba, that we are on target to meet the
president's policy goal of having us down to 50,000 troops in Iraq come
September the 1st of this year," he said. "Everything is trending in
that direction. So it would take an extraordinarily dire turn of events
for that to be something we were to consider."
U.S. and Iraqi officials have warned insurgents would likely increase
the level of violence in an attempt to disrupt the upcoming vote.
Sunday's election is the second parliamentary ballot since the overthrow
of former dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003.
Morrell
says the security situation has improved significantly.
"These are the first national elections that are not taking place during
a large-scale insurgency and widespread sectarian violence," said
Morrell. "This is an historic opportunity, and Iraqis recognize it as
such. We expect participation to be broad across Iraq's ethnic and
sectarian spectrum. What's more, unlike prior campaigns, no major
political parties or ethnic groups are boycotting the elections."
The election is considered a test of Iraq's ability to conduct a smooth
transition of power and maintain its own security after years of
sectarian violence.
U.S. President Barack Obama has ordered a full withdrawal of American
soldiers by the end of next year. |