About 500 Australian combat troops have pulled out of southern Iraq, six months after Kevin Rudd, the Australian prime minister, came to power promising to bring the soldiers home. A spokesman for the governor of Dhi Qar province said the troops had pulled out of the Talil base in Nasiriya on Sunday, with US forces replacing them. But a British military spokesman in the southern city of Basra said the withdrawal was still under way. The pullout comes as polls show that 80 per cent of Australians are against the war in Iraq. Rudd promised to bring home all of his country's frontline troops this year. Australia is a close ally of the US and was one of the first countries to send troops to the war. It also sent military aircraft and naval vessels to the Gulf to guard Iraq's offshore oil platforms. The 515-strong troop contingent has mainly trained and supported Iraqi forces in the Dhi Qar province. Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, Australia's top military commander, said in February that after the troop pullout two maritime surveillance aircraft and a warship would remain in place to help patrol Iraq's oil platforms. He also said that a small force of security and headquarters liaison troops would remain in Iraq. The British military spokesman said Australian civilians training the police and advising the Iraqi government would stay behind. |
10:52 AM
Australian troops pull out of Iraq
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