Richardson: I'd Leave No Troops in Iraq

By LIBBY QUAID
The Associated Press
Sunday, June 10, 2007; 4:33 PM

WASHINGTON -- Democratic presidential hopeful Bill Richardson said Sunday he wanted a total withdrawal of U.S. forces in Iraq and that American troops are targets in a civil war.

"I would leave no troops in Iraq whatsoever," Richardson said. "The difference between me and the other candidates is, they would leave troops there indefinitely, and I would not."


Democratic Presidential hopeful U.S. Sen. Barack Obama speaks at a fund raiser Friday, June 8, 2007 in Chicago accompanied by his wife Michelle Obama. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)
Democratic Presidential hopeful U.S. Sen. Barack Obama speaks at a fund raiser Friday, June 8, 2007 in Chicago accompanied by his wife Michelle Obama. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green) (M. Spencer Green - AP)

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He said a U.S. withdrawal should be used as leverage to promote a reconciliation conference of sectarian groups, an all-Muslim peacekeeping force and a donor conference to rebuild Iraq.

Richardson says U.S. troops should be redeployed by the end of the year to Afghanistan and the Persian Gulf. Other Democratic presidential candidates also advocate troop withdrawals but leave room for residual forces.

The Bush administration envisions a decades-long U.S. presence in Iraq.

One Republican presidential candidate, John McCain, said, "We aren't talking about staying forever." But he said a long-term training and advisory presence is possible.

"The fact is that if we can withdraw to bases and then eventually close those bases and come home, that's the plan," the Arizona senator said.

McCain said it's a shame that "September seems to be a magic moment" for deciding whether President Bush's troop surge in Iraq is working. Bush is due to receive an assessment then from Gen. David Petraeus, the U.S. commander in Baghdad.

"I'm hoping that he would come back and say, `We've achieved a certain measure of success,' to give us some hope and optimism," McCain said. "I'm hoping that can happen, but not in my wildest dreams do I expect him to come back and say, `Everything's fine now,' just a few months after we've adopted a new strategy. That would be crazy."

Richardson spoke on CNN's "Late Edition." McCain's interview last week with ABC's "This Week" aired Sunday.

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WASHINGTON (AP) _ Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has sought out former Secretary of State Colin Powell for advice on foreign policy matters.


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