U.S. troops will leave Iraq by year end: Obama

August 28, 2010 12:03 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 09:25 pm IST - VINEYARD HAVEN, Massachusetts

A U.S. soldier returns to Washington on Wednesday after the formal end to combat missions in Iraq. President Barack Obama has said that "Iraq is free to chart its own course", adding that the "war is ending".

A U.S. soldier returns to Washington on Wednesday after the formal end to combat missions in Iraq. President Barack Obama has said that "Iraq is free to chart its own course", adding that the "war is ending".

President Barack Obama said Saturday all U.S. troops in Iraq "will be home" by the end of the year, in a speech marking the end of combat operations in Iraq.

Mr. Obama used his weekly radio and Internet address to highlight Tuesday’s formal end to U.S. combat missions in Iraq - the realization of a promise he made as a candidate in the 2008 election.

Remaining troops will assume a backup and training role, a shift Mr. Obama will underscore with a visit to Fort Bliss, Texas, and an Oval Office address to the nation on Aug. 31, the date he targeted last year for the change in focus. U.S. troop strength dropped below 50,000 this week, a milestone also highlighted by the administration.

“In the months ahead, our troops will continue to support and train Iraqi forces, partner with Iraqis in counterterrorism missions and protect our civilian and military efforts,” Mr. Obama said, a day before ending his 10-day Martha’s Vineyard vacation to travel to New Orleans and mark another somber date- the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

Driving home his point, the president said, “The bottom line is this - The war is ending. Like any sovereign, independent nation, Iraq is free to chart its own course. And by the end of next year, all of our troops will be home.”

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said while “much hard work remains” in Iraq, “U.S. combat forces in Iraq have done everything their country asked of them over the past seven years. We owe them our deepest gratitude for all they have done, are doing, and will continue to do in defence of our nation.”

“As a candidate for this office, I pledged I would end this war. As president, that is what I am doing,” Mr. Obama said. “We have brought home more than 90,000 troops since I took office. We have closed or turned over to Iraq hundreds of bases. In many parts of the country, Iraqis have already taken the lead for security.”

Mr. Obama also pledged continued support for veterans and the Veterans Affairs Department, noting that the Iraq and Afghanistan wars produce different injuries than past conflicts.

“Too many suffer from traumatic brain injury and “post-traumatic stress disorder” the signature injuries of today’s wars, and too few receive proper screening or care. We’re changing that,” Mr. Obama said, calling it a “moral obligation.”

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