Poland and Iraq discuss troop cut

Published: 27 July 2005 y., Wednesday

Polish Prime Minister Marek Belka has arrived in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, for talks with his counterpart, Ibrahim Jaafari, on Polish troop levels.
The pair are to discuss the scheduled withdrawal of 1,500 of the soldiers from Iraq early next year.

The Polish government has been a staunch supporter of the US-led coalition in Iraq.

However, the policy is now unpopular with the public and it no longer has the funds or soldiers to sustain it.

When the US invited Polish troops to command a huge multi-national force in southern Iraq two years ago, the Polish government saw it as a great opportunity to improve its armed forces and Poland's international standing. Even though much of the public originally supported the idea of sending troops to Iraq opinions have now changed.

Many of the expected economic and political benefits have not materialised. And now the overwhelming majority of Poles want the soldiers to come home.

Šaltinis: BBC News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Culture MEPs call on EU for more European online conversation

The role of the interactive internet in generating European conversations and explaining the European Union should be cautiously expanded says a recent report. more »

Commission President Barroso meets CoR President Bresso and regional and local leaders

To feed the requests of regions and cities into key EU reform debates, Committee of the Regions President Mercedes Bresso brought together Commission President Barroso and the Presidents of European associations of regional and local authorities. more »

Queen Elizabeth visits Canada

Despite torrential rains, hundreds of Canadians showed up on Monday to welcome Queen Elizabeth for her 23rd official visit to Canada. more »

Buzek briefs Human Rights Subcommittee on visits to Russia & China

Human rights and relations with Moscow and Beijing were in the spotlight when EP President Buzek discussed his recent visits to China and Russia with MEPs on 24 June. more »

Human rights: Congo, Nepal, Libya

In three resolutions adopted in Strasbourg on Thursday, the European Parliament denounces the murder of a human rights campaigner in the Democratic Republic of Congo, urges all sides in Nepal to work together for political stability and expresses dismay at reports that 18 people were executed in Libya last month. more »

Floods in Europe: Solidarity Fund money must be delivered as fast as possible

The EU Solidarity Fund must be made available as swiftly as possible to help the regions stricken by the torrential floods in Central Europe and France, say MEPs in a resolution adopted on Thursday. more »

Protests at UK troop parade

Militant Muslim protesters and far-right demonstrators scuffle with police at a British troop homecoming parade in east London. more »

European Commission allocates €5 million for urgent humanitarian aid in Kyrgyzstan

Today, the Commission decided to provide emergency funding of €5 million to assist the vulnerable victims of the serious violence involving the Kyrgyz and Uzbek communities in Kyrgyzstan which erupted on 10 June. more »

International protection for third country nationals: unsatisfying divergences in Member States' implementation of rules

EU Member States have widely diverging interpretations of the so called Qualification Directive, which sets minimum standards for identification of people in need of international protection. more »

New video of Haitian earthquake

Recently released video from security cameras at Haiti's presidential palace shows the devastating impact of the January 12 earthquake. more »