Coalition of the exit-planners
British troops will start a major withdrawal from Iraq next May under detailed plans on military disengagement to be published next month, The Observer can reveal.
The document being drawn up by the British government and the United States will be presented to the Iraqi parliament in October and will spark fresh controversy over how long British troops will stay in the country. Tony Blair hopes that, despite continuing and widespread violence in Iraq, the move will show that there is progress following the conflict of 2003.
Britain has already privately informed Japan -- which also has troops in Iraq -- of its plans to begin withdrawing from southern Iraq in May, a move that officials in Tokyo say would make it impossible for their own 550 soldiers to remain.
The increasingly rapid pace of planning for British military disengagement has been revealed on the eve of the Labour Party conference, which will see renewed demands for a deadline for withdrawal. It is hoped that a clearer strategy on Iraq will quieten critics who say that the government will not be able to "move on" until Blair quits. Yesterday, about 10,000 people demonstrated against the army's continued presence in the country.
The organizers of the march in D.C. -- the one Bush hid from in Colorado -- think they had 300,000. The police chief says 150,000. Photos here. The Freepers countered with about 200.
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