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US troops ready to withdraw from Iraqi cities

Cement barriers are removed as Company C, 2nd Battalion, 5th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division, begins to evacuate the Joint Security Station (JSS) Comanche base south of the Sadr City district in Baghdad on June 24, 2009. The Iraqi Ministry of Agriculture will be taking over the base following the June 30 deadline for US forces to pull out of Iraq's urban centers as required by a security accord signed between Baghdad and Washington in November 2008. Photo courtesy AFP
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) June 25, 2009
US combat troops will pull out from Iraq's cities and main towns Tuesday as the war-torn country takes sole charge of security in a major stepping stone to a complete American withdrawal.

Most American troops will retreat to their main bases and only re-enter urban areas if the Iraqi security forces ask for their support in tackling unrest or conducting other operations.

Formal ceremonies will take place on Monday but the government has declared the official departure day a national holiday.

Soldiers and armoured vehicles will continue to patrol the streets just as they have for the past six years but from now on the patrols will exclusively comprise the national army and police.

Only a small number of US forces in training and advisory roles will remain in urban areas, with the bulk of American troops in Iraq, still numbering 131,000 as of this week, quartered elsewhere.

Iraqi leaders have voiced confidence that they are ready to provide security for the country's near-30 million people, but have warned that major obstacles linger, suggesting insurgents and militias could step up their attacks to coincide with the US pullout.

"Withdrawal does not mean the end of security challenges," Interior Minister Jawad al-Bolani said at a press conference in Baghdad this month, before adding: "The security forces have the capability to face these challenges."

Those forces -- 500,000 police officers and around 250,000 soldiers -- have largely taken charge already, with General Ray Odierno, the top US commander in Iraq, acknowledging that most of his troops have already left the cities.

But questions remain over whether the security situation has improved permanently. More than 200 people have been killed this month, with especially large bombings striking the northern city of Kirkuk and Baghdad's Sadr City.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has put the attacks, the former of which was Iraq's bloodiest in 16 months, down to an attempt by Al-Qaeda to undermine confidence in the country's security forces and revive sectarian division.

Iraq was blighted by such feuding in 2006 and 2007, when tens of thousands lost their lives.

Violence has dropped markedly since, with May 2009 seeing the fewest deaths linked to unrest since the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein's regime in 2003. Attacks, however, remain common, especially in Baghdad and the restive northern city of Mosul.

US forces insist they will not stay in Iraqi cities past June 30, despite concerns from some over the security situation in Mosul, in particular.

Odierno has said that the focus for American troops will shift to training, advisory and coordination, with only a small number, though he did not specify how many, remaining in cities in those roles.

"We are committed to a sovereign, stable, self-reliant Iraq," he told reporters earlier this month.

In addition to the transfer of most bases, US forces have pledged to provide their Iraqi counterparts with 8,500 rebuilt and reissued Humvees, 5,000 of which have already been handed over, Odierno said, without specifying when the transfers would be complete.

They will also release or transfer to Iraqi custody about 11,000 detainees held in US prison camps, with the last American facility closing in August 2010.

Maliki has already said Iraq will call on the Americans for logistical support because his military forces lack planes and helicopters, but has insisted Baghdad will not request help on combat operations.

In February, President Barack Obama announced a new strategy that will see most US combat troops leave Iraq by August 2010, although a force of up to 50,000 will remain until the end of the following year.

The pullout from cities, major towns and villages stems from last November's US-Iraq accord -- the Status of Forces Agreement -- that enshrines the end of 2011 deadline for a complete US withdrawal.

Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh, meanwhile, led a recent press conference by noting that June 30 already holds a special place in the minds of many Iraqis.

On that day in 1920, an insurrection led to the first broad-based political movement calling for an independent Iraq.

Here are some key facts related to the pullout and the accord:

750,000 -- the number of soldiers and police Iraq has at its disposal to secure the country after US forces withdraw from urban centres.

131,000 -- the number of US troops stationed in Iraq, according to the Pentagon, the majority of which are already out of the country's cities, towns and villages.

100,867 -- the documented number of Iraqi civilians killed as a result of violence from the US-led invasion in 2003 until June 1, 2009, according to the British non-governmental organisation Iraq Body Count.

10,956 -- the number of Iraqi detainees in US-run prisons, as of June 16, with 750 per month being handed over to the Iraqi authorities who can decide to release them or keep them in custody.

4,316 -- the number of US soldiers who have died in Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion, according to an AFP count based on the independent website icasualties.org.

1,844 -- the minimum number of Iraqi police and soldiers killed from July 2007 to June 1, 2009, according to an AFP count, based on monthly tolls released by the Iraqi government.

914 -- days until the December 31, 2011 deadline by which US troops must leave Iraq for good, after June 30.

700 -- observation posts that line Iraq's 3,600 kilometres (2,250 miles) of borders.

157 -- the number of bases the US once used to operate in Iraqi cities, all of which must be handed to Iraqi forces by June 30.

1 to 134 -- ratio of police officers per Iraqi citizen, compared to ratios of 1 to 252 in France and 1 to 537 in Canada.

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