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US eyes pause in troop cuts
11/02/2008 17:32 - (SA)
Baghdad - US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said in Baghdad on Monday he was in favour of a short pause in troop drawdowns from Iraq after about 30 000 soldiers have been sent home by this July.
Gates said the security situation in Baghdad remained "fragile", a comment echoed on the streets of the capital which was rocked by two car bombings that left 11 people dead just as he was winding up his surprise trip to Iraq.
"I think that the notion of a brief period of consolidation and evaluation probably does make sense," he told reporters after a two-hour meeting with the US commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus.
"I must say, in my own thinking, I am headed in that direction as well, but one of the keys is how long is that period and what happens after that. "It still has to be determined and decided by the president."
The 157 000-strong US force in the insurgency-wracked country is currently on track to come down from 19 brigades to 15 by July. Gates has previously expressed the hope that the drawdown can continue to about 10 brigades or about 100 000 troops at year's end.
Petraeus is supposed to make recommendations in April on US force levels for the second half of the year. Last month he suggested in an interview with CNN that he will ask for a pause in the drawdown to assess whether security can be maintained with fewer troops.
It is not clear how long a pause Petraeus has in mind, but reports have varied from 30 to 90 days.
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