Speaking to a German magazine, Iraqi Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki has praised a plan by US presidential candidate Barack
Obama to withdraw US troops from Iraq within 16 months of taking office, dpa reported.
In an interview to appear in its Monday issue, the news magazine Der
Spiegel asked him when US troops should leave.
"As far as we are concerned, as soon as possible. The US presidential
candidate Barack Obama has spoken of within 16 months. We think that would be
the right time frame, with some slight variations," he said.
Asked if this was a recommendation to US voters to pick the presumptive
Democratic nominee Obama rather than the expected Republican nominee John
McCain, he said, "Whoever counts on shorter periods in Iraq today is
closer to reality.
"Artificially extending the stay of the US troops would create problems.
But I obviously don't want to give a voting recommendation.
"Choosing a president is the business of Americans. It's the business of
Iraqis to say what they want done. The people and the government are fairly
united about this. There should be a limit on the stay of the coalition
forces."
Al-Maliki, who was due to meet Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Tuesday,
said he expected an agreement with Washington on troop withdrawal before US
President George W Bush leaves office next January.
"We are going to make a fresh start to these negotiations on a better and
clearer basis, because the first draft was not acceptable to us," he said.
Al-Maliki agreed it had been a "basic problem" that the United States
had sought immunity from prosecution for any crimes that might have been
committed by US soldiers in Iraq.
But the other issues, of how long the troops remained, and with what powers,
were "just as important," he said.
Maliki's remarks were released by Spiegel just a day after Bush agreed to
discuss a "time horizon" for the withdrawal of US forces.
Bush had in the past described a withdrawal timetable as dangerous, but
Washington appears to have shifted ground.
The White House said Bush and al-Maliki held a video conference on Thursday and
agreed that because of improved security, the agreement could include a
"general time horizon for meeting aspirational goals such as the
resumption of Iraqi security control."