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All U.S. forces are required to leave Iraq by Dec. 31 under a 2008 security accord between the two countries. But many officials from both nations believe Iraq is still too unstable to protect itself without U.S. help, and Washington has offered to let up to 10,000 U.S. troops stay to train the country's security forces. Al-Maliki "stressed that the Iraqi parliament is the body that decides eventually whether the country needs the U.S. forces to stay or not," the statement said. Al-Maliki also told Biden that "the leaders of the political blocs might be able to reach a decision on this during their next meeting." However, a large and continued presence of U.S. troops may be difficult to sell to an Iraqi public already tired of eight years of war. Moreover, if the troops stay, al-Maliki risks a potentially violent backlash from the followers of the anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who has galvanized grass roots support across Iraq by promising to drive out the U.S. military. With the U.S. troop presence a hotly contested issue, al-Maliki wants parliament to be responsible for the final decision.
[Associated
Press;
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