Sunday 20 May 2007

Brownite opportunism

With the Tories making great gains down south and with the increasingly antagonistic mood of the SNP here, Brown is obviously getting worried. In a bid to regain support from pissed off Labour voters, as well as those supporting the SNP, the soon to be Prime Minister has started working on a withdrawal plan aiming to remove troops from Iraq before the Westminster general election.Scotland on Sunday reports:



One senior Cabinet minister, expected to play a central role in Brown's first government, said an accelerated withdrawal from Iraq was one of the "foremost options" under consideration.

He added: "We are already committed to a withdrawal of sorts. The schedule can be altered so it is comfortably done within two years."

Under the blueprint for withdrawal announced by Blair in February, the 7,100 British troops currently in Iraq would be reduced to 5,000 by late summer, with an aspiration to reduce gradually over the following two years.

But the military plans sparked by the looming change at the top involve cutting the British presence more rapidly: to 4,000 by late summer and perhaps 2,000 to 3,000 by the year end.

The ultimate hope is to draw down to a "nominal" force within 18 months, and a virtually complete exit within two years of Brown coming to power.

Michael Codner, director of military sciences at the Royal United Services Institute, said declining public support and demands had raised expectations of changes in the British presence.

He said: "There is a growing view that British forces in Iraq will be reduced substantially in the next 12 months, perhaps to as low as 1,500. The change of leadership is an obvious catalyst."
Let's see how this turns out.

3 comments:

Charlie Marks said...

thanks for brining this story to my attention. I guess brown's playing it cool at the moment, justifying the war rather than admitting it was a "mistake". I read in Saturday's Daily Mail (in Peter Oborne's column, the only readable thing in the sordid rag) that Blair's "fell short" statement when he made his official resignation announcment to a rigged audience in the north east was not refering to Iraq but to Ruth Turner getting nicked over cash4honours...

Frank Partisan said...

To Blair it was not a mistake. The tactics were mistaken, but to bourgeoise politicians liberal and conservative, in the US and UK, they still share the goals.

Charlie Marks said...

oops. I didn't mean it was a mistake... like "oh bother, we accidentally invaded another country and then occupied it for years!"