US 'mulls changes' to Iraq pact

US

Washington has agreed to consider Iraqi suggestions on amendments to the draft of a pact which would govern the US military's role in Iraq, the Iraqi foreign minister has said.

 
But Hoshyar Zebari said on Wednesday that Washington is unlikely to accept a drastic revision to the draft Status of Forces Agreement (Sofa), which is concerned with setting up a framework for the presence of US troops after 2008.
 
"Yes, they are going to listen to the changes... We will give the amendments in writing. They will study it and get back to us. That is the usual pattern," he said.
 
"In my opinion and based on my follow-up for the negotiations, I do not think there will be structural amendments. Maybe it will touch the wording and descriptions, possibly, but the backbone of the pact is what has already been agreed on."
 
US warning
 
Robert Gates, the US defense secretary, has said that "pretty dramatic" consequences would follow if the Sofa pact falls through.
 
Gates said on Tuesday in Washington that the door was "pretty far closed" on further negotiations towards a security deal, although he emphasized that efforts are continuing.
 
Iraq's cabinet discussed the pact on Tuesday and unanimously called for changes to the draft now under review, despite US warnings that time is running out to finalize a deal.
 
"The consequences of not having a Sofa and of not having a renewed UN authorization are pretty dramatic in terms of consequences for our actions," Gates said.
 
A status of forces agreement would replace the current UN mandate - which expires on December 31 - as the legal basis for the US military presence in Iraq.
 
Cabinet decision
 
Iraq's Political Council for National Security reviewed the draft agreement on Sunday and Monday before sending it on to the cabinet.
 
Iraq's Al-Sharqiya television reported that ministers from both the largest Sunni bloc - the National Concord Front - and the ruling mainly Shia grouping, the United Iraqi Alliance, wanted amendments.
 
But Gates and other US officials stressed on Tuesday that the current document should be acceptable to both sides.
 
According to Gates, there are "only two alternatives: the Sofa or a renewed UN mandate, and going back to the UN at this point there is no assurance that you get a clean rollover".
 
He said there is "great reluctance" to include further changes, as the US government consults congress on the current draft.
 
But "if they [Baghdad or congress] were to come up with something we haven't thought of, or identify problems we missed some way, we would have to take that seriously", Gates said.
 
"So I don't think you slam the door shut. But I would say it's pretty far closed."
 
For his part, Sean McCormack, the US state department spokesman, said: "We believe that this is a good text. We wouldn't have had the secretary of state and the secretary of defense making phone calls about this text if we didn't think it was a good text."
 
Mullen's warning
 
The Bush administration earlier played down the Iraqi cabinet's decision to seek further negotiations.
 
"We knew it was going to take a little while to get this done," Dana Perino, the White House spokeswoman, said on Tuesday.
 
"We knew that the Iraqis would have several steps to go through."
 
But Michael Mullen, chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, said that time was running out for Baghdad to back the deal, which was originally due to have been completed by the end of July.
 
He cautioned that when the current UN mandate runs out on December 31, Iraqi security forces "will not be ready to provide for their security".
 
Iraq violence
 
Mullen said Iraq risked security losses of "significant consequence" unless it approved an agreement that provides a legal basis for US forces to remain in the country.
 
David Isenburg, a security analyst with the Cato Institute, told Al Jazeera that both sides are "playing hardball in the negotiations, as [one] would expect".
 
The draft agreement could pose a problem to Barack Obama, the Democratic candidate for the US presidency, should he win the race for the White House, he said.
 
"One important thing to note about this agreement is that it is currently constituted to keep US troops through to the end of 2011. Senator [Barack] Obama said that if he gets into office he will have all US troops out in 16 months. So the agreement would lock him into keeping troops beyond where he wants to be," Isenburg said.
 
Isenburg said an extension to the current UN mandate would only postpone examination of the differences between Baghdad and Washington.
 
"All they can get the the UN is, at most, a one-year extension of the current mandate. That would leave all the current issues between Iraq and the US unresolved," he said.
 
While the issue of the draft pact was debated in Washington, violence continued in Iraq.
 
A car bomb killed four people and wounded three in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, recently the site of targeted attacks against Iraqi Christians.
 
The attack, which targeted civilians, occurred in the Ath-Thawra neighborhood, said Hazim Ahmed, a local policeman.
 
In Baghdad, police also reported that five people had been wounded when bombs attached to two cars exploded.
 
PHOTO CAPTION
 
An Iraqi officer inspects a large amount of weapons which were found in an industrial area in Baghdad's Sadr City on October 21, 2008.
 
 Al-Jazeera

Related Articles

Prayer Times

Prayer times for Doha, Qatar Other?
  • Fajr
    04:38 AM
  • Dhuhr
    11:46 AM
  • Asr
    03:07 PM
  • Maghrib
    05:36 PM
  • Isha
    07:06 PM