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Bush advises UK pullout based on Iraq war progress
15 Jun 2008 17:19:12 GMT
Source: Reuters
(Refiles to make clear this is UPDATE 6)

By Jeremy Pelofsky and Luke Baker

LONDON, June 15 (Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush said British Prime Minister Gordon Brown should only withdraw forces from Iraq based on conditions on the ground and not an arbitrary timetable.

Bush issued the advice in an interview published on Sunday ahead of his visit to Britain, the final stop of a European farewell tour on which he has won support for ratcheting up pressure on Iran over its nuclear programme.

He told Britain's Observer newspaper that the United States and Britain, Washington's main ally on Iraq, obviously wanted to bring their troops home but that could be done only "based upon success."

"Our answer is: there should be no definitive timetable," said Bush, adding he was "appreciative" that Brown was in frequent touch about "what he and his military are thinking."

The newspaper described Bush as issuing a warning to Brown, but the White House dismissed that tone, saying there was no disagreement between the United States and Britain on Iraq. It later released a transcript of the interview as clarification and said Iran was likely to figure more prominently in talks.

Both agreed that any troop reductions would be based on "progress on the ground, on the advice of our military and not according to any arbitrary schedule," Bush national security adviser Stephen Hadley told reporters aboard Air Force One.

"There is no disagreement between us and Prime Minister Brown on this issue," he said.

Only about 4,200 British troops remain in Iraq, most of them stationed at a base in the south. Britain has indicated it could pull them all out by the end of 2008, but with the situation still unstable in Iraq, that appears unfeasible.

TEA WITH QUEEN ELIZABETH

After arriving in Britain under heavy guard, Bush and his wife Laura had tea with Queen Elizabeth and toured Windsor Castle ahead of a social dinner with Brown and his wife and bilateral talks on Monday.

Bush was led by the queen who pointed to a squat suit of armour that belonged to Henry the Eighth as well as royal crests covering the ceiling. Bush looked up and nodded as they were trailed by Laura and the queen's husband Prince Philip.

Bush has a more formal relationship with Brown than his predecessor, Tony Blair, Washington's staunchest supporter over Iraq. Brown is battling against poor opinion poll ratings and Iraq is a divisive issue in Britain.

BBC television showed a small group of protesters in Windsor demonstrating against Bush but were out of his view.

When Brown visited Washington in April he caused a stir by meeting the 2008 presidential candidates before Bush, a sign of how leaders are increasingly looking towards a new president.

The White House was keen to play up the mutual respect of the two men and said they had a lot to discuss, including Iran, climate change, energy policy, and the situation in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

With much of Europe still smarting over the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, Bush has spent a lot of his trip trying to forge a united front to press Iran to suspend its enrichment of uranium which could be used to build nuclear bombs.

There have been only muted anti-Bush protests, in contrast to big rallies that marred his past visits. He was warmly greeted by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

They all offered support for efforts to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons and Merkel went a step further, backing more sanctions on Tehran if it refuses the latest request from world powers that it stop enrichment.

"There is determination that if the Iranian regime rejects the latest offer ... that the consequence of the regime's decision will result in greater isolation," Hadley said.

Bush is expected to travel to Belfast on Monday after meeting Brown before returning to Washington. (Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick in London; editing by Stephen Weeks)


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An Iraqi military tank takes up position on the outskirts of Amara, 300 km (185 miles) southeast of Baghdad June 15, 2008. Iraq's government beefed up army and police units in ...



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