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“It
does not look like a U.N. resolution will match the content”
Zapatero
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MADRID,
April 19 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Spain's new Prime
Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero ordered Sunday, April 18, his
country's 1,300 troops to withdraw from Iraq “as soon as
possible”, as the United States feared that other “coalition”
countries would follow the Spanish lead.
“I
have given the order to the defense minister to take the necessary
measures so that Spanish troops are withdrawn from Iraq as soon as
possible and with maximum security,” Zapatero said in an address on
Spanish television a day after formally taking office.
“It
does not look like a U.N. resolution will match the content” of the
Spanish demands for the continued presence of the troops, Agence
France-Presse (AFP) quoted the prime minister as saying.
Shiite
leader Moqtada Sadr was quick to hail Zapatero’s decision, ordering
his fighters not to attack Spanish troops, AFP said.
Zapatero
had vowed following his Socialist Party's election win
last month to pull Spanish troops from Iraq unless they come
under U.N. command by June 30 when their mandate expires.
U.S.
President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair on
Friday, April 16, pledged to give the United Nations a central role in
the transfer of power to the Iraqi interim government, planned for
June 30.
The
move had been seen as a way to keep countries like Spain on board with
the U.S.-led occupation, despite a recent surge in violence and hostage-taking
in Iraq.
Zapatero
gave no details on the timetable for the withdrawal, but government
sources said the pullout could take place over about 50 days.
Egypt’s
official news agency MENA said late Sunday that Spanish Foreign
Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos had informed Egyptian counterpart
Ahmad Maher that Madrid plans to pull its troops out of Iraq “within
15 days”, but Maher later said that no specific timeframe was
mentioned.
Under
former prime minister Jose Maria Aznar, Spain, along with Britain and
Italy, had been one of the strongest supporters of Bush's invasion of
Iraq.
Reconsidering
Positions
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“We
have 34 countries with forces on the ground. I think there are
going to be some changes,” Rice
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Zapatero’s
decision immediately jolted the Bush administration with National
Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice fearing that it would make other
“coalition” nations with forces in Iraq would reconsider their
positions.
“We
know that there are others who are going to have to assess how they
see the risk,” Rice told ABC's This Week program on Sunday.
“We
have 34 countries with forces on the ground. I think there are going
to be some changes.”
But
she added that “we know that the Spanish have been talking about,
perhaps, pulling their forces out. I would not be at all surprised if
they do”.
White
House spokesman Ken Lisaius also said Washington wanted the Spanish
withdrawal to be made in a “co-ordinated, responsible and orderly
manner”, reported Reuters news agency.
Earlier
threats of Zapatero has sent
shockwaves through Washington, which faces now the possibility
that other “coalition” governments might follow the Spanish lead.
Not
Ready
Meanwhile,
U.S. overseer in Iraq Paul Bremer said Sunday Iraqi forces will not be
ready to take over security after the June 30 power transfer.
Bremer
said that if the former Republican Guards of the ousted regime, the
Fedayeen Saddam militia and Sadr’s Mahdi Army "are to be
prevented from shooting their way into power, Iraq's security forces
must have help until they are fully equipped and trained”.
“This
is what the coalition intends to do,” AFP quoted Bremer as saying in
a statement.
“But
it is clear that Iraqi forces will not be able, on their own, to deal
with these threats by June 30 when an Iraqi government assumes
sovereignty.
“Instead,
Iraq and troops from many countries, including the United States will
be partners in providing the security Iraqis need,” he added.
Eleven
U.S. occupation troops were
killed on Saturday, April 17, in resistance operations across
Iraq - including five U.S. Marines killed in pitched battles near the
Syrian border.
The
deaths brought to 99 the number of U.S. troops killed in attacks since
April, and push to at least 700 the number of troops killed since the
start of the U.S.-led war to occupy oil-rich Iraq one year ago.