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  • Putin casts doubt on Iraq polls, US combat deaths near 1,000

    Putin casts doubt on Iraq polls, US combat deaths near 1,000

    Agence France Presse
    Dec 7 2004

    12-07-2004, 19h57

    Mehdi Fedouach - (AFP)

    BAGHDAD (AFP) - Russian President Vladimir Putin cast doubt over the
    viability of holding elections as planned next month in an Iraq under
    "total occupation", as the number of US soldiers killed in combat
    neared 1,000.

    In the latest violence, assailants targeted the country's minority
    Christians by setting off explosions in two churches -- one of them
    Chaldean, the other Armenian -- in the northern city of Mosul, but
    without causing casualties.

    "Each attack against a church pushes Christians to emigrate," said
    Faid Touma Hermez of the Chaldean Democratic Union. The insurgents
    "want to erase any trace of the Christian presence in Iraq."

    In Baghdad, US soldier died after his patrol was ambushed, the
    military said.

    A total of 999 US military personnel have now been killed in action
    in Iraq since the US-led invasion of the country in March 2003,
    according to Pentagon statistics.

    In other violence, an Iraqi entrepreneur working for US forces was
    shot dead in his car near an American base in Samarra, north of the
    capital, police said. Some 40 such killings have been carried out in
    the region over two months.

    "I cannot imagine how elections can be organized in conditions of
    total occupation of the country by foreign troops," Putin said as he
    met Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi at the Kremlin.

    "At the same time, I don't understand how you alone can remedy the
    situation in the country and prevent its disintegration," he told
    Allawi.

    Putin noted, however, that Moscow had supported the UN Security Council
    resolution calling for elections in Iraq to be held on January 30
    and said Russia stood "ready to support your efforts to stabilise
    the situation in the country".

    General John Abizaid, commander of US forces in the Gulf, said
    American troops in Iraq could have a different role overall after
    the elections, as their focus could shift away from combat and toward
    training Iraqi forces.

    "If the Iraqi security forces start to gel in terms of leadership and
    seasoning in important areas around the country -- which I think will
    happen -- then we can talk about reshaping our forces," he told the
    Washington Post.

    But the general noted that, at the moment, the Iraqi troops "are
    not as mature as they need to be for the security environment that's
    going to exist in the next several months."

    Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, meanwhile, said the US-led
    multinational forces should speed up their departure from Iraq by
    training local troops more quickly.

    Training Iraqis would provide an "exit strategy" for the foreign
    troops, he told the British parliament.

    In Moscow, Allawi was seeking in his talks with Putin to smooth
    diplomatic relations, following a similar mission to Germany on a
    European tour of powers that opposed last year's invasion.

    The premier said Moscow would be given a "leading role" in helping
    restore Iraq's shattered industries -- a clear signal was Baghdad
    was ready to give Russia access to its lucrative oil industry.

    Officials in Moscow said Russia would try to win back oil contracts it
    signed under Saddam Hussein's regime in exchange for Moscow's promise
    to write off 90 percent of Iraq's eight billion dollar Soviet-era debt.

    Allawi said in a Belgian newspaper interview that Iraq's elections --
    faced with an insurgency determined to derail the process through
    bloodshed -- could be spread out over a period of 15-20 days in
    late January.

    "Everyone -- Shiites, Sunnis, Christians, Kurds, Turkomans -- should
    take part in the vote," he was quoted as saying by the daily Le Soir.


    "For that I think one could envisage elections spread over 15 days,
    20 days, with polling on different dates for different provinces ...
    That would allow for adequate security arrangements to be put in
    place," he added.

    But in a classified cable sent in late November, the CIA station
    chief at the end of a year-long tour of duty in Iraq warned that the
    security situation was only likely to worsen in the runup to the polls,
    The New York Times said.

    More violence is in the pipeline, said officials familiar with
    the cable.

    On a positive note, two Sunni Muslim parties, including the key Islamic
    Party, announced Tuesday plans to take part in the general elections,
    despite earlier calls for the polls to be postponed.

    The head of a leading Shiite Muslim movement, meanwhile, warned that
    delaying the polls would create legal complications and could lead
    to chaos.

    "Delaying elections will lead to a legal problem, because the Iraqi
    government will be illegitimate ... as it expires with the election
    date," said Abdulaziz al-Hakim, leader of the Supreme Council for
    the Islamic Revolution in Iraq.

    In other developments, the US military announced the arrest in Hawija,
    50 kilometres (30 miles) from the northern city of Kirkuk, of Salam
    Daud, who it described as a chief of the Saddam Fedayeen militia
    loyal to the former dictator.

    Colonel Lloyd Miles said a number of other people were also arrested,
    including Iraqi police and national guardsmen working with insurgents.
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