05/01/2004

Britain could be in Iraq for years, says Straw

Britain's military commitment in Iraq is no longer being measured in months, according to the Foreign Secretary.

In London this morning, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said that coalition troops would be required to maintain stability up to and following the July 1 deadline for the official handover of power to the Iraqi governing council. Mr Straw could not confirm when a full withdrawal might occur – saying that it could be as far away as 2007.

Mr Straw pointed out that Iraq's new democratic structures would flounder if coalition troops left thus creating a stability vacuum. There are currently around 10,000 British troops stationed in Iraq.

During his surprise visit to British troops in Basra yesterday, albeit a surprise which the world's press pack were in on, Prime Minister Tony Blair heaped praise on the British soldier as the new pioneer of soldiering in the 21st century – a century where the "chaos of terrorism" will take centre-stage, rather than the monolithic threats from nations which Britain had to face in the past.

Whilst his immediate audience was a small gathering of British soldiers, the wider message for the world at large was clear – that Britain had gone to war over alleged weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and it would do so again. Mr Blair warned that Iraq was the "test case" for other "brutal" regimes around the world.

Mr Blair also acknowledged that while there were a "few different opinions about the wisdom of conflict", there was absolutely nobody in the UK who has anything other than "enormous pride in the British Armed Forces".

He added: "And by nature and by instinct and by the intelligent use of the experience that you have had, Iraq today is taking shape under your help and with your guidance in a way that would have been unthinkable a year ago.

"So of course I want to say to you, thank you for the work that you are doing, but I think that when you come to a far away country such as this and you spend many months, it is as well to know not merely that you are fighting because that is what you have been ordered to do, but that the work that you have been doing has been in a noble and a good cause, and it has."

(gmcg)

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