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Thread: Australian troops in Iraq withdrawl

  1. #1
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    Australian troops in Iraq withdrawl

    AUSTRALIAN combat troops have begun withdrawing from Iraq, fulfilling an election promise by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to bring the soldiers home this year.

    The soldiers from Overwatch Battle Group (West) 4 had been based at the Tallil air base, 300km south of Baghdad, and were responsible for providing security overwatch for Iraq security forces, as well as reconstruction and aid work.

    A British military spokesman in the southern city of Basra said today the pullout from Talil base in Nassiriya was under way, but a spokesman for the governor of Dhi Qar province said it had been completed, with US forces replacing the Australians.

    "The Australian battle group is pulling out," the British military spokesman said.

    There was no comment tonight from the Australian Defence Department and Defence Minister Joel Fitzgibbon.

    Australia, a staunch US ally, was one of the first countries to commit troops to the Iraq war five years ago.

    In addition to the combat troops, it also deployed aircraft and warships to the Gulf to protect Iraq's offshore oil platforms.

    Since handing over security of Dhi Qar province to the Iraqis, the main role of the Australian battle group has been to train and support Iraqi forces.

    Mr Rudd, who ousted John Howard's coalition government after 12 years at last November's election, had promised to bring home frontline troops this year.

    It was a stark contrast to Mr Howard's commitment to the war. During his prime ministership, Mr Howard repeatedly said the troops should stay until the job was done, arguing Labor's plan to "cut and run" from Iraq would galvanise terrorists.

    Polls show 80 per cent of Australians oppose the war.

    Australia defence chief, Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, said in February that after the troops pulled out, Australia would leave behind two maritime surveillance aircraft and a warship helping patrol the oil platforms, as well as a small force of security and headquarters liaison troops.

    The British military spokesman said Australian civilians training the police and advising the Iraqi government would also stay behind.

    Preparations were made to pull out at the end of the troop's current six-month rotation in the middle of the year, and Britain and the US were informed.

    Last week, British Defence Secretary Des Browne said Britain had planned accordingly for an Australian drawdown of troops.

    "As it turns out, where they are working in Iraq is in an advanced stage of its own independence in terms of providing its own security," he said in a speech at the National Press Club in Canberra last week.

    "Coincidentally, it was probably about time they were coming out of Tallil anyway so it works out in a way that suits all of us."

    Britain still has about 4000 troops in southern Iraq.

    He said then that Britain was grateful to the people of Australia and to the troops for their "magnificent" contribution to Iraq.

    In April, US Ambassador to Australia Robert McCallum said Washington harboured no hard feelings over the Labor government's decision to pull Australian combat troops out of Iraq.

    No Australian has died in combat in Iraq.
    thank god for that.

    http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,23792609-2,00.html

  2. #2
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    My brother is part of this. Its just the end of the rotation and it is nothing new or surprising for the media. I saw some of the photos from in there and it will just blow your mind. Some of it is quite scarry. The rotation that is coming out will be either leaving or returned by the middle of June, the problem is that the journey took about 1 week to get in, so I assume about the same to get out.
    Cheers
    Slunnie


    ~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~

  3. #3
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    Just checked, it mid July, not mid June.
    Cheers
    Slunnie


    ~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~

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    Quote Originally Posted by Slunnie View Post
    Just checked, it mid July, not mid June.
    That's great news , How long was/has he been away for ?

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Disco_owner View Post

    Polls show 80 per cent of Australians oppose the war.


    Australian troops in Iraq withdrawl | NEWS.com.au
    [/B]
    Would be interesting to see what % of Australians support the idea of Australian defence forces assisting Iraqi and Afghan civilians...

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Disco_owner View Post
    That's great news , How long was/has he been away for ?
    Yeah, it'll be good when he is back. Its a 6 month rotation that they're on, having left Sydney mid Jan.
    Cheers
    Slunnie


    ~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~

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    Quote Originally Posted by LavisLane View Post
    Would be interesting to see what % of Australians support the idea of Australian defence forces assisting Iraqi and Afghan civilians...
    Thats exactly it. More appropriate questioning wouldn't help the story though.
    Cheers
    Slunnie


    ~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~

  8. #8
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    No Australian has died in combat in Iraq.


    You have to be in Combat to die in it..Pretty hard to happen when your wrapped up in cotton wool by your Government and in the green zone 99% of the time....
    My mates are peed off over there with their hands tied.

    Conversly they are loving the Stan...lots of firefights ,lots of kills most field force soldiers love doing the real soldier thing.
    Had a BBQ two months ago and some of the stories coming back are awesome, not to many Afghannies killed, mostly Packies down south.

  9. #9
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    Anyone see the report on 'Foreign Correspondent' the other night ?
    It involved two Aussie journo's that were in Afghanistan and near killed in a suicide bombing a month or so back.
    Very graphic and brought home the chaos, brutality and uncertainty of the situation for the average Afghani well.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by rick130 View Post
    Anyone see the report on 'Foreign Correspondent' the other night ?
    It involved two Aussie journo's that were in Afghanistan and near killed in a suicide bombing a month or so back.
    Very graphic and brought home the chaos, brutality and uncertainty of the situation for the average Afghani well.

    Sydney-based freelance photographer Stephen Dupont, 41, and his colleague, Paul Rafael, were in a car about 20m from the blast which tore through a team in the small town of Khogyani who were preparing to eradicate opium poppy fields in eastern Afghanistan.

    It is believed Mr Rafael was airlifted to the air base hospital at Jalalabad after the blast.

    Mr Dupont, a winner at last year's Walkley Awards, was not physically injured, but badly shaken by the blast, he told friend and journalist Sophie Berry in Afghanistan.

    "Steve called me straight after the bomb went off," Ms Berry said. "He was fine, absolutely fine. He was shaken."

    A man claiming to be a Taliban commander for the region named Qari Sajad told an AFP reporter by telephone the suicide bombing was carried out by a Taliban militant.

    Afghanistan's interior ministry said 19 people - 12 police and seven civilians - were killed and 41 others were wounded.

    Witnesses said the blast left the area covered in flesh and blood.

    Australian journalists injured in suicide blast | NEWS.com.au

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