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  Two US allies leaving Iraq, more may go   (AP)  Updated: 2005-12-02 07:15  
 Two of America's allies in Iraq are withdrawing forces this month and a 
half-dozen others are debating possible pullouts or reductions, increasing 
pressure on Washington as calls mount to bring home U.S. troops.  
 
 
 
   Bulgarian soldiers 
 prepare to board an aircraft at Krumovo airfield, some 150 kilometers (93 
 miles) east of Sofia, in this Aug. 11, 2003 file photo. 
 [AP] |   
Bulgaria and Ukraine will begin withdrawing their combined 1,250 troops by 
mid-December. If Australia, Britain, Italy, Japan, Poland and South Korea reduce 
or recall their personnel, more than half of the non-American forces in Iraq 
could be gone by next summer. 
 Japan and South Korea help with reconstruction, but Britain and Australia 
provide substantial support forces and Italy and Poland train Iraqi troops and 
police. Their exodus would deal a blow to American efforts to prepare Iraqis to 
take over the most dangerous peacekeeping tasks and craft an eventual U.S. exit 
strategy. 
 "The vibrations of unease from within the United States clearly have an 
impact on public opinion elsewhere," said Terence Taylor of the International 
Institute for Strategic Studies in Washington. "Public opinion in many of these 
countries is heavily divided." 
 Although the nearly 160,000-member U.S. force in Iraq dwarfs the 
second-largest contingent 錕斤拷 Britain's 8,000 in Iraq and 2,000 elsewhere in the 
Gulf region 錕斤拷 its support has shrunk substantially. 
 In the months after the March 2003 invasion, the multinational force numbered 
about 300,000 soldiers from 38 countries. That figure is now just under 24,000 
mostly non-combat personnel from 27 countries. The coalition has steadily 
unraveled as the death toll rises and angry publics clamor for troops to leave. 
 In the spring, the Netherlands had 1,400 troops in Iraq. Today, there are 19, 
including a lone Dutch soldier in Baghdad. 
 Ukraine's remaining 876 troops in Iraq are due home by Dec. 31, fulfilling a 
campaign pledge by President Viktor Yushchenko. Bulgaria is pulling out its 380 
troops after Dec. 15 parliamentary elections, Defense Minister Veselin Bliznakov 
said. 
 In his strategy for Iraq, announced Wednesday, President Bush said expanding 
international support was one of his goals. He also seemed to address the issue 
of more allies withdrawing. 
 "As our posture changes over time, so too will the posture of our coalition 
partners," the document says. "We and the Iraqis must work with them to 
coordinate our efforts, helping Iraq to consolidate and secure its gains on many 
different fronts." 
   
  
  
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