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Poland Ends Iraq Mission

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  • Poland Ends Iraq Mission

    POLAND ENDS IRAQ MISSION
    by Amal Jayasinghe

    Agence France Presse
    October 4, 2008 Saturday 2:29 PM GMT

    Poland formally ended its Iraq mission in the Shiite province of
    Diwaniyah on Saturday leaving US troops to take their place, as an
    Iraqi commander warned insurgency could re-emerge.

    Poland's final contingent of 900 troops would return home by end of
    the month and the withdrawal process was already underway, a military
    official told journalists at the ceremony in this central Iraqi town.

    Warsaw's Defence Minister Bogdan Klich attended the ceremony and
    parade, where troops from Armenia, Mongolia, Romania, Ukraine, Latvia,
    Bosnia and Herzegovina and the United States also participated.

    "We feel responsible for the future of Iraq. The completion of our
    mission does not mean end of our engagement," Klich said. "We hope
    to cooperate in Iraq's economic and financial areas."

    Iraq's top military commander, General Babaker Zebari, thanked Polish
    troops for helping restore stability in the region, but warned that
    security gains should not be taken for granted.

    "We should not sit back. We have to preserve the security and stability
    that we have achieved," Zebari said. "The terrorists have a way of
    re-activating themselves."

    The multinational forces flag was lowered at Diwaniyah's Camp Echo
    and presented to Klich by the Polish commander in Iraq, Major General
    Andrzej Malinowski, an AFP correspondent reported.

    Malinowski told reporters the 900 troops deployed in Diwaniyah and
    its surroundings will be pulled out by end of the month.

    Klich said that "the current security situation remains stable and
    better," adding that Poland was happy to have been part of the US-led
    coalition.

    "Solidarity among friends. That is why we participated in a difficult
    and dangerous mission in Iraq."

    In its more than five years of military involvement in Iraq, Poland
    has lost 21 soldiers and seen 70 others wounded, according to a US
    military statement on Saturday.

    Around 15,000 Polish soldiers had been deployed in Iraq since the
    2003 war, it said.

    "Today is a day of mixed emotions. I can't help but feel a bit
    of sadness," said the top US military commander in Iraq, General
    Raymond Odierno.

    "I have known seven out of the 10 (Polish) commanders personally. You
    have been close and trusted friends."

    Odierno told reporters that the timing of the Polish withdrawal was
    "good," as security in the region has improved.

    "We will be sending some troops to this place but not as much as
    before," he added.

    Odierno described the Polish contribution as "absolutely outstanding"
    and said the sacrifices of Polish lives will not be forgotten.

    Heavily armed troops guarded the main stage from where the dignitaries
    watched the multinational forces together with Iraqi police and
    army parade at a football-field size ground barricaded by concrete
    blast walls.

    US Apache attack helicopters and surveillance aircraft were seen
    over the base. Local politicians and tribal leaders also attended
    the ceremony.

    After the formal Polish farewell, local Shiite lawmaker Sheikh Hussein
    al-Shalan said all foreign troops must leave, but after training
    Iraqi forces on how to deal with "terrorism and terrorists."

    In July the Us-led forces handed over to the Iraqis security control
    of Diwaniyah, which has seen occasional outbursts of intense Shiite
    infighting.

    Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who came to power in October 2007,
    pledged a quick withdrawal from Iraq during his election campaign.

    With the withdrawal by Warsaw, the US-led coalition that invaded Iraq
    in 2003 has further shrunk.

    In May 2003, two months after the US invasion, the occupying force
    was made up of 150,000 Americans and 23,000 other troops from 40
    countries. Now, US numbers are around 144,000 while the coalition
    has shrunk to less than 10,000.

    The coalition now is made up of Britain, Romania, El Salvador,
    Bulgaria, Azerbaijan, Albania, Mongolia, Czech Republic, Armenia,
    Macedonia, Tonga, Lithuania, Bosnia, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine,
    Latvia and Moldova.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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