UPDATED ON:
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
07:55 Mecca time, 04:55 GMT
 
News Middle East
US redeploys troops to Afghanistan
At least 8,000 will be out of Iraq by February 2009 [File: GALLO/GETTY]

George Bush, the US president, has announced 8,000 troops will be pulled out of Iraq over the coming months and 4,500 sent to Afghanistan by January.

"While the enemy in Iraq is still dangerous, we have seized the offensive, and Iraqi forces are becoming increasingly capable of leading and winning the fight," he said in a speech in Washington DC on Tuesday.

"Attacks by the Taliban have increased over the past two years," Bush said at the National Defence University.

Bush said Afghan soldiers were "courageous" but "needed help" and that it was important to rebuild educational, agricultural infrastructures in the country.

He said success in Afghanistan was "critical for America and people of the free world".

Nick Spicer, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Washington, said: "The withdrawal amounts to 5.5% of the troops in Iraq ... it's really not that significant.

"This isn't the big pull-out some people in the establishment were calling for."

Decision 'too late'

Al Jazeera's Jasim Azawi, the presenter of Inside Iraq, said the decision to "make amends" by removing troops from Iraq was "too late".

He said: "The legacy, the name, the connection between Iraq and president Bush, is going to be a negative one.

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US to redeploy Iraq troops

"This is the biggest disaster the United States has committed in the 21st century and it will be a long time before the credibility of the United States and the name of president Bush is mentioned in a good sentence.

"The negative effect of the legacy of George Bush is not limited to Iraq, it has spread all over the Arab world as well as the Muslim world.

"The next [US] president is going to [have to] work very hard in order to ameliorate the image of the United States."

Any large-scale change in US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan will be left to Bush's successor - either John McCain, the Republican nominee or Barack Obama, the Democratic candidate - after Bush leaves office in January 2009 following the November 4 presidential elections.

Zeina Khodr, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Kabul, said: "US military commanders have been calling for up to 10,000 troops to be sent ... they are facing a resurgent Taliban carrying out bolder attacks.

"The Taliban have not been defeated."

Voters' anger

A reduction of 8,000 soldiers would leave 138,000 US government troops in Iraq and there are currently 33,000 in Afghanistan.

That will still be more than before Bush ordered a "surge" of extra forces in 2007 and also more than in November 2006, when his Republicans lost mid-term congressional elections largely due to voter anger over the war.
   
Bush's plan follows recommendations from senior US defence officials, including Robert Gates, the defence secretary, Mike Mullen, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and David Petraeus, the top commander in Iraq.    
   
Obama has promised to withdraw US troops from Iraq within 16 months and said he would put more resources into Afghanistan and "anti-terrorism efforts" along the Pakistan border, where US officials say they believe Osama bin Laden, the al-Qaeda leader, is hiding.
   
McCain has refused any set any timeline for withdrawing troops from Iraq.

He has said he prefers Bush's policy of removing them based on commanders' recommendations and security conditions in the war zone.
   
'Fragile and irreversible'

Bush's "surge" strategy, which sent an additional 30,000 troops to Iraq, has helped stem violence and pulled Iraq back from the brink of civil war, according to White House officials.

The so-called "surge," which was announced in 2007, was criticised by many Democrats who said the US should be pulling out of the country.
    
While violence has fallen in Iraq, attacks against US, Nato and Afghan troops in Afghanistan have soared.

Nato commanders there have asked for additional forces for years and say they still need about 12,000 troops.
   
The US has 33,000 troops in Afghanistan, split between a Nato-led mission and a separate "counter-terrorism" mission run by the Pentagon.

 Source: Agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 9
 
benji yamamoto
United States
10/09/2008
Isreals Little War pat I
(part 1) U.S. soldiers are being moved into Afghanistan. This will lead to an increase in aggression against Pakistan, which we are already seeing. It is a repeating cycle, with the "U.S." invading a sovereign (Muslim) nation with total disregard for that nation. However - there is an answer to this dilemma! (read part 2)

benji yamamoto
United States
10/09/2008
Isreals Little War part2
(part 2) Everyone in the U.S., from the highest General to the lowest foot soldier must be made aware that we are carrying out an agenda for an outside influence > I will call it "ISRAEL". It is imperative that Americans be made aware of the hidden outside influence behind these "wars". You have a responsibility to convey this, in whatever way you are able.

Ayub
Afghanistan
10/09/2008
Troops redeployed.
How stupid or blood thirsty can these young men be.What do the US military leaders tell these young soldiers,i wonder.This is what i think:These are towelheads,ragheads,araabs,Talibans,terrorists,etc and just shoot them,kill every arab looking or afghan looking person.Who thinks this way in a modern civilised world.Don't these US kids have a brain of their own and decide not to murder and kill women and children.US soldiers must think they are brave murdering women and children.How cruel.

Ayub
Afghanistan
10/09/2008
Troops redeployed.
Just look at those kids in the pic:These are blood thirsty Americans playing video games like SOCOM and then going into poor Afghans and Iraqis homes murdering women and children,there have been reports of rapes of young boys and girls.How can these people do that,what goes through their minds to commit such heinous crimes against humanity,what kind of steroids are they given i wonder.War and murder is so obsolete,it's a thing of the past.Take the oil and Opium,leave the people alone,please....

Zorak
Afghanistan
10/09/2008
Redeployment
Stupid U.S. government, didnt they learn from the British and Soviets that it doesnt matter how many soldiers you send to Afghanistan it will conclude in the same outcomes that history has recorded. The longer the U.S. forces engage in combat in Afghanistan, the more will the Afghans see that the U.S. has failed to bring peace amongst all Afghan parties and brought nothing but death and destruction. Germany is a country NATO should follow NOT U.S.

R Suleiman
United States
10/09/2008
Afghanistan
"on the brink" of civil war? I'm scared then to see what a civil war would be. The White House is seriously full of lies, they even claimed that the US has "almost won the war." Win? Where's the winning? Quite frankly, a fourth grader can provide more truths than Washington can.

Sam
United Kingdom
10/09/2008
It seems that America wants to shift war from Afghanistan to Pakistan!

Bigmel1981
Malaysia
10/09/2008
US redeploys troops to Afghanistan
The official say that the war in IRAQ has been lost ... now try to cover up in Afghanistan

Onesmus Odhiambo
Afghanistan
10/09/2008
USA DONT BE FOOLED BY BUSH
It seems republicans are stealing obamas campaign tools . Maccain and bush were not for change but for status quo . Republicans had no plan to widhraw troops from Iraq and were boasting of success in Afgan .watch out the cosmetic changes in the mortgage sector is just but a campaign gimmic . If by any chance bush gets a third term US economy will plung into deep recession as Dick chenny will still dictate defence policy .

 
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