WORLD> Middle East
    Clinton: US stands by Iraqis, withdrawal on track
    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2009-04-26 09:00

    BAGHDAD -- US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton tried to reassure nervous Iraqis that the US won't abandon them, even as she said the American troop withdrawal would stay on schedule despite a recent surge in violence.

    On her first visit to Baghdad as chief US diplomat, Clinton said Saturday that Washington remains committed to moving US soldiers out of urban areas by June 30 and pulling out combat troops from the country by 2011.

    Clinton: US stands by Iraqis, withdrawal on track
    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) speaks during a joint press conference with Iraqi counterpart Hoshyar Zebari in the headquarters of the Foreign Ministry in Baghdad April 25, 2009. [Agencies]

    "Our strategy in working with you may be in a new phase, but we pledge our full and continuing commitment to Iraq and the Iraqi people," she told a news conference after meeting Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari.

    "As we drawn down militarily we will deepen our civilian cooperation," Clinton said, standing beside Zebari in an auditorium at the Foreign Ministry.

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    The withdrawal will proceed in a "responsible and careful way," she said, and would not affect efforts to improve Iraq's security forces, or complete reconstruction and development projects.

    Zebari welcomed Clinton's "very assuring message that the United States would continue to support the efforts of the Iraqi government and the enhancement of Iraqi security and stability." He said Iraqi authorities wanted to ensure there is "no vacuum" when US troops leave.

    Clinton made clear, however, that Iraqis and their security forces in particular need to overcome sectarian and other differences if they are to build a united, secure nation, she said.

    Suicide bombings Thursday and Friday that primarily targeted Shiite worshippers killed more than 150 people, many of them Iranian pilgrims. The second attack, at a revered Baghdad tomb, was the single deadliest bombing in the country this year.

    "I condemn these violent recent efforts to disrupt the progress that Iraq is making," Clinton said, claiming the attacks were a sign that extremists are afraid Iraq's government is succeeding.

    But she said the response by the government and its people was "firm and united in rejecting that violence and refusing to allow it to set Iraqi against Iraqi, which is obviously one of its intended goals." These attacks, she said, "do not reflect any diversion from the security progress that has been made."

    Iran's supreme leader blamed the US and Israel for the attacks. "Dirty hands and evil brains that founded this blind and uncontrolled terrorism in Iraq should know that the fire will burn themselves," Iran's state TV quoted Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as saying on Saturday.

    Clinton said it was "disappointing for anyone to make such a claim since it is clearly traced to the al-Qaida remnants and other violent groups who wish to disrupt the progress of Iraq."

    Violence is at its lowest since the months after the US-led invasion in March 2003. But the recent attacks have exposed gaps in security as Iraq takes over from US forces in protecting the country.

    "Frankly, some people are afraid," said one participant in at a town hall meeting Clinton hosted at the US Embassy in the capital, adding the many questioned the ability, competence and neutrality of Iraq's security forces, given the US withdrawal plan.

    "There is nothing more important than to have a united Iraq," Clinton replied. "The more united Iraq is, the more you will trust your security services. The security services have to earn your trust but the people have to demand it."

    "We will be working closely with the Iraqi government and the Iraqi security forces as we withdraw our combat troops, but we need to be sure that all of you are supporting a strong, nonsectarian security force and we will work to try and help make that happen," she said.

    To the nervous but receptive town hall crowd, Clinton said the US commitment in the years ahead "may look somewhat different" because of the troop pullout timetable.

    Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has ordered a military task force to investigate this past week's attacks as well as shortcomings that allowed the assailants to slip through. The government on Saturday ordered heightened security at major Shiite shrines.

    The top US commander in Iraq, Gen. Raymond Odierno, has said American troops could "maintain a presence" in some cities if requested by the Iraqis.

    President Barack Obama plans to withdraw American combat troops by Aug. 31, 2010, leaving 30,000 to 50,000 troops in training and advisory roles. Under a US-Iraqi security pact, those remaining American troops would be withdrawn by the end of 2011.

    Clinton was met at the airport by the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, and the new US ambassador, Christopher Hill.

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