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Subject: Give us guns - and troops can go, says Iraqi leader - UK TIMES
From: torresD
Date: 1/19/2007 4:42:23 PM
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2553148,00.html
"If we succeed in implementing
the agreement between us to speed
up the equipping and providing weapons
to our military forces,
I think that within three to six months
our need for American troops
will dramatically go down.
That is on condition that there are real,
strong efforts to support our military
forces and equipping and arming them."
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2553148,00.html
The Times January 18, 2007
Give us guns - and troops can go, says Iraqi leader
Stephen Farrell in Baghdad
Prime Minister wants change of US policy
Mistakes over Saddam hanging, Times told
Listen to the interview with Nouri al-Maliki
America's refusal to give Baghdad's
security forces sufficient guns and
equipment has cost a great number of
lives,
the Iraqi Prime Minister said yesterday.
Nouri al-Maliki said the insurgency
had been bloodier and prolonged
because Washington had refused
to part with equipment.
If it released the necessary arms,
US forces could "dramatically" cut
their numbers in three to six months,
he told The Times.
In a sign of the tense
relations with Washington,
he chided the US for
suggesting his Government
was living on "borrowed time".
Such criticism boosted Iraq's extremists,
he said, and was more a reflection of
"some kind of crisis situation" in
Washington after the Republicans'
midterm election losses.
Mr al-Maliki conceded that his
administration had made mistakes
over the hanging of Saddam Hussein.
But he refused to accept all
criticism over the execution.
When asked about the Italian
Prime Minister Romano Prodi's
attack on Iraq's capital
punishment laws,
Mr al-Maliki cited the Italians' summary
killing of Benito Mussolini and
his stringing-up from a lamppost.
Asked how long Iraq would require US troops,
Mr al-Maliki said:
"If we succeed in implementing
the agreement between us to speed
up the equipping and providing weapons
to our military forces,
I think that within three to six months
our need for American troops
will dramatically go down.
That is on condition that there are real,
strong efforts to support our military
forces and equipping and arming them."
The US Government is wary of handing
over large amounts of military hardware
to the Iraqis because it has sometimes
ended up in the hands of militias and insurgents.
Gordon Johndroe, the White House
national security spokesman,
conceded that some of Mr al-Maliki's
criticism was "valid".
The training and equipping of
Iraqi troops would be speeded up,
he said, adding that by
"self-admission we have had
to redo our training and
equipment programme".
Although Mr al-Maliki's
tone was measured throughout,
he is clearly irritated at US
criticism that he has failed
to curb Shia militias.
Robert Gates,
the new US Defence Secretary,
said that Mr al-Maliki could
lose his job if he failed to
stop communal bloodshed and
Condoleezza Rice,
the Secretary of State,
gave a warning that he was
living on "borrowed time"
and that American patience
was running out.
Challenged on the point,
Mr al-Maliki remarked acidly:
"Certain officials are
going through a crisis.
Secretary Rice is expressing
her own point of view if she
thinks that the Government is
on borrowed time,
whether it is borrowed time for
the Iraqi Government or American
Administration.
I don't think we are on borrowed time."
He added: "I wish that we could
receive strong messages of support
from the US so we don't give some
boost to the terrorists and make
them feel that they might have
achieved success.
I believe that such statements
give moral boosts to the terrorists
and push them towards making an extra
effort and making them believe that
they have defeated the American
Administration,
but I can tell you that they
haven't defeated the Iraqi
Government."
He rejected the accusation
that his Government was
"lenient" with Shia militias,
saying 400 al-Mahdi Army members
had been arrested in recent days,
in crackdowns in southern towns
such as Karbala, Samawa, Diwaniya and al-Nasiriya.
And he insisted that he was
prepared to fulfil his promises
to Washington and confront the
militias of Shia parties within
his coalition, including Moqtada
al-Sadr's widely feared al-Mahdi Army.
He conceded that some "sectarian"
acts were being perpetrated.
But he said there would not be
a civil war because Sunni and
Shia had lived in peace for many years.
Video Diary: Stephen Farrell on Barzan's hanging video
Inside Iraq: Stephen Farrell and Ned Parker blog from Baghdad
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