US President George W. Bush's plan to send more than 20,000
additional combat troops to Iraq got a chilly reception in key
European countries Thursday, and many commentators said they do not
believe it will succeed.
Several allies in Asia, however, lined up behind the strategy,
and Britain gave a cautious endorsement although it stressed it had
no plans to match the US commitment by sending any new troops of
its own.
British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said the troop
increase demonstrates the US and Iraqi governments' determination
to deal with the deteriorating security situation. Scores of Iraqis
die daily in civil strife and insurgent attacks, and the US death
toll now tops 3,000.
But Beckett was also quick to distance the British government
from the new US move.
"It is not our intention at the present time to send more
troops," she told reporters at Downing Street. She said Britain was
continuing to work "progressively" towards transferring security
responsibility to authorities in Basra, southern Iraq, where it has
about 7,000 troops.
The left-leaning Guardian newspaper described Bush's plan as a
"last throw of the dice" in Iraq. An editorial, with the headline
"Defiance and delusion," called Bush's Iraq policy a "misconceived
enterprise that has dragged his country, this country and the
Middle East into a nightmare."
In Russia, senior Defense Ministry official Vladimir Shamanov
said the additional troops "won't be able to radically change the
situation with ensuring peace and security in this country."
Shamanov said the main weakness of the US plan is that it sends
most of the additional troops to Baghdad: "Without firm authority
in the provinces, it's not possible to establish law and order in
the country," he told the ITAR-TASS news agency.
French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said the solution
for Iraq, beyond Bush's troop increase, is "the participation of
all civilian, political and religious elements in Iraqi
society.
"It is through a comprehensive approach, through a political
strategy, that Iraq and the whole region will regain their
stability," Douste-Blazy said in a carefully worded statement.
France was one of the main critics of Bush's push to invade Iraq
in 2003.
Retired French general Jean Salvan, who commanded troops in the
first UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon, said he believed Bush was
paving the way for an honorable pullout in an effort to avoid the
shame suffered when US forces left Vietnam.
"What Bush is apparently trying to do is to depart from Iraq
honorably, without leaving behind catastrophic images like when the
Americans left Saigon," he said.
The first European reaction to the plan was decidedly more
negative than it received in Asia, where key allies South Korea,
Australia and Japan all pledged continued support for the US war
effort.
"If America retreats in Iraq, then that has enormous
consequences for the stability of the Middle East and it will also
be an enormous boost to terrorism in our part of the world,"
Australian Prime Minister John Howard said in Sydney.
(China Daily via agencies January 12, 2007)