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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Obama's Campaign Pledge is Realized

 
“Today, I can report that, as promised, the rest of our troops in Iraq will come home by the end of the year”. Significant words came from President Barack Obama during a press conference on Friday as he announced the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq to have the last soldier leave by the end of 2011.
This announcement has some symbolic significance as well. It comes as perfect timing to the three other foreign policy accomplishments by the Obama administration. The first being the raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan on May 1, following the drone killing of al-Qaida figure Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen and most recently the backing of actions that led to the end of dictator Moammar Gadhafi’s reign in Libya and subsequent death. The talks to leave Iraq are marked by the trip taken by then President Bush in late 2008. The farewell trip to Baghdad is most remembered because of the incident at a press conference in which an Iraqi journalist threw his shoe at President Bush and continued to call him a “dog”.  President Obama’s press conference on Friday outlined a much different and evolved relationship with the US and Iraq, one in which will now have to enter a new phase in maintaining peace and security.  
The plan in Iraq is to leave about 160 military personnel to be stationed at the American Embassy in Baghdad and 3,000-5,000 private security contractors as well as considerable CIA presence. The talks have been long and drawn out ever since President Obama’s first announcement to withdraw troops and end of combat in Iraq in late August 2010. The most notable push back is the issue of legal immunity for US soldiers. For a long time Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki and President Obama held negotiations about the legal protection of American soldiers. The Iraq government held steadfastly that American soldiers should be held accountable in Iraqi courts and be subjected to Iraqi punishment. The negotiations only became more complex with the release by Wiki leaks of a report that detailed the killing of Iraqi civilians, including children, in a 2006 raid by American troops. In recent weeks the negotiations in Baghdad revealed that such protection would be impossible. 
 With this huge announcement came a lot of expected criticism. The most obvious of the critics are Republican leaders. Presidential candidate Mitt Romney had strong words for President Obama when it came to the decision to bring home troops. Romney accused Obama of making a “naked political calculation” and ultimately called the President’s negotiations with the Iraqi government inept. Another Republican critic was found in Senator John McCain, who faced Obama in the 2008 election when the two candidates had polarizing ideals on the war. McCain called the withdrawal a “consequential failure” for the Obama administration.
Despite some criticism most Democrats in Washington support the latest decision. In fact, many see this as an opportunity to win over votes for the 2012 presidential election. As previously stated, the announcement to bring troops from Iraq home is the last of four important foreign policy accomplishments by Obama since he has taken office. While many Democratic strategists hope that these events will resonate with Americans it is known that voters care much more about domestic issues than they do about foreign policy. This is evident in the election of President Obama himself who was a first term Senator with little foreign policy experience. In spite of that the Obama campaign hopes to reap from the benefits at Presidential debates come November, claiming most of the Republican candidates, like businessman Herman Cain, have little experience in the field. Other benefits of this decision for the Obama campaign is the fact that ending this decade long war that cost Americans billions of dollars, will mark the beginning of the re-building of the nation’s economy.
The announcement on Friday was met with mixed emotions. While many feel the end of the Iraq war is an accomplishment and the homecoming of American troops as a good thing, others feel that the security of Iraq has been compromised and the influence of Iran will grow. It is clearly too early to know what the consequence will be but there is not doubt that the withdrawal of troops will stop the loss of American lives in Iraq and bring back the much missed family members and friends.
Below is a link from the New York Times website that includes an interactive timeline of the war in Iraq:

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