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IRAQ WARS
US troops no longer needed in northern Iraq: general
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 29, 2011

Large numbers of US troops are no longer needed on the ground in northern Iraq to defuse Arab-Kurdish tensions and have begun handing over control to local forces, a US commander said Thursday.

Army Major General David Perkins, who leads 5,000 US troops deployed in northern Iraq, said the American contingent has gradually withdrawn from checkpoints that it had overseen to prevent clashes between Kurdish troops and Iraqi army and police.

"So we no longer have US forces on any of those checkpoints permanently as we did before," Perkins told reporters via video link from Iraq.

"And that has gone exceptionally well" with no incidents reported since the beginning of September, he said.

Three US battalions used to work at the checkpoints in the north but after an 18-month transition, the Iraqi forces were in charge, Perkins said.

"Clearly there is not the need for them (US troops) to play the role they had, especially in the numbers they had. We have proven right now that out at the checkpoints they can run perfectly fine without US presence there at all."

His upbeat comments reinforced suggestions from the former commander in Iraq, General Ray Odierno, who said recently that progress in transferring security duties to local forces could mean a large contingent of American troops would not be required to contain tensions.

The US troop presence in northern Iraq is a pivotal issue in Washington and Baghdad as the two countries negotiate a possible future US military mission in Iraq beyond an end-of-year deadline.

The remaining 46,000 troops in Iraq are due to pull out of Iraq by the end of 2011 unless the two governments strike a deal.

US commanders and some lawmakers have previously argued that keeping a brigade in northern Iraq was crucial to preventing ethnic war there by allowing the Americans to play a peacekeeping role.

But if the Pentagon decides 4,000-5,000 troops are not required in the north, that would allow US officials to agree to a smaller overall troop footprint after 2011 and possibly make the deal easier to sell politically for Iraq's government.

US officials say the administration is weighing a proposal to keep only about 3,000-4,000 troops in Iraq after 2011 in a mission focused mainly on training, with private contractors taking over some tasks previously performed by the military.

Perkins said he expected the US still to play a mediating role in the north but "at the very senior level" without large numbers of troops deployed.

He acknowledged underlying tensions between the Kurds and Iraqis over boundaries and oil resources but said any spark for potential violence would come from political discord and not from friction between the Kurdish and Iraqi government troops and police on the ground.

The 4th Infantry Division soldiers in the north have drawn down to 5,000 from 10,000 and will withdraw from Iraq completely by the end of October, leaving behind a small number of American troops, the general said.

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Five Iraqis, US soldier killed in violence
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Sept 29, 2011 - Attacks killed five Iraqis, including three who died when a suicide bomber blew up an explosives-packed truck in the northern city of Kirkuk, and an American soldier on Thursday, officials said.

In the deadliest attack, blamed on Al-Qaeda, two women and a man were killed and 76 others were wounded by a truck bomb in front of a bank in Kirkuk as policemen collected their monthly salaries.

The hurt included 26 policemen, more than 20 employees of the targeted bank as well as surrounding offices, and the rest were civilians, according to Kirkuk provincial health director Sadiq Omar Rasul.

"Al-Qaeda is trying to send a message that they are there," said provincial police chief Major General Jamal Taher Bakr. "They are trying to ignite sectarianism between Kirkuk's communities."

An AFP correspondent at the scene said the blast caused massive damage to the bank and surrounding buildings. Several police vehicles were ablaze, and access to the bank was blocked.

Parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi said provincial security forces were responsible for a "dangerous violation of security," and called for a full investigation into the attack.

Iraq's northern Kurdish region wants to incorporate Kirkuk province, which is ethnically mixed and rich in energy, into its autonomous three provinces, a move strongly opposed by the authorities in Baghdad.

In northern Iraq, an American soldier was killed, the first such death in the country in more than two months.

"A US service member was killed Thursday in northern Iraq," a brief US army statement said. It gave no further details.

The last US soldier to be killed in Iraq died on July 15 in the southern province of Basra, according to independent website www.icasualties.org. Three American soldiers have died since then, but all in "non-hostile" incidents.

Thursday's death brings to 4,477 the number of American soldiers to have died in Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion of the country, according to an AFP tally based on data compiled by icasualties.org.

An Iraqi policeman was also gunned down in Baghdad on Thursday, while a soldier was killed and two others wounded by a mortar attack against an Iraqi military base in Tarmiyah, just north of the capital, according to police and an interior ministry official.

Violence is down nationwide since its peak in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common. A total of 239 people were killed in violence in Iraq in August, according to official figures.





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IRAQ WARS
Two dead in north Iraq bomb attack: police
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Sept 29, 2011
A suicide bomber who detonated his explosives-packed truck outside a bank in the disputed northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk killed at least two people on Thursday, police said. The attacker set off the explosion as many workers were queueing at the bank to collect their salaries on the last working day of the month, a police officer said. "One woman and one man were killed and 73 others were ... read more


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