WASHINGTON,
Oct. 21 (Xinhua) -- U.S. President Barack Obama on Friday announced all U.S.
troops stationed in Iraq will pull out of that country by the end of this year,
and the Iraq War will be over.
Obama made
the statement after speaking with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki via
video conference, and he reaffirmed U. S. commitment of drawdown to the Iraqi
leader. He said both leaders agreed to the decision.
"After
nearly nine years, America's war in Iraq will be over," Obama said, after
over 4,400 U.S. solders were killed there and tens of thousands Iraqi lives
lost in the war.
Obama said
after U.S. troops are pulled out from Iraq, the relationship between the two
countries will be "one normal relationship between sovereign
nations," and he will be welcoming Maliki to the White House for a visit
in December.
Obama vowed
the United States will have "strong and enduring partnership" with
Iraq, which he defined as "an equal partnership based on mutual interests
and mutual respect."
Under a
security agreement reached with Iraq in 2008, the United States would pull out
all its troops from that country by Dec. 31. But the administration had been
negotiating with Iraq on leaving some troops behind as trainers. Whether the
troops would have immunity was said to be the sticking point in discussions.
Denis
McDonough, Obama's deputy national security advisor, told reporters in the
White House that the two sides did talk about the immunity issue, but the
decision to withdraw is not based on it. He said the decision is reflective of
both sides' views of "the kind of relationship both nations want to
have."
After
ending combat mission in Iraq last year, the U.S. military's role in Iraq has
been mostly about training and advising. There are about 40,000 U.S. troops in
Iraq.
By pulling
troops out of Iraq, Obama kept a major campaign promise. He said by ending the
Iraq War, the administration can focus more on the ailing economy.
"After
a decade of war the nation that we need to build and the nation that we will
build is our own, an America that sees its economic strength restored just as
we've restored our leadership around the globe," said the President.
Related:
- News Analysis: U.S. pullout from Iraq, political decision or not?
- U.S. troops still hold 20 military bases in Iraq
- Poll shows one-third U.S. veterans think Iraq, Afghanistan wars not worthwhile
- Special Report: Situation in Iraq

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