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Biden says Iraq close to forming government

US Vice President Joe Biden, in Baghdad to mark the end of US combat operations, said yesterday he believed Iraq's political stalemate was nearly over and officials would form a government in "the next couple of months."

Biden told CBS's "Early Show" he had spoken with all of Iraq's main political leaders and thought there was a good chance of a deal being struck soon, a view one senior Iraqi politician called "very optimistic."

In a separate interview with PBS Newshour, the US vice president offered a broader time frame.

"I've met with every one of the groups that won portions of the vote in the elections and I'm absolutely convinced that they are nearing the ability of forming a government, that will be a government representing the outcome of the election which was very much divided," he said.

"I am confident that they ... have run the course of what other options they have and it's getting down to the point where in ... the next couple of months there's going to be a government," he told PBS Newshour.

Biden also told PBS, "The only thing I have said in the name of the president, the government has to reflect the outcome of the election which is another way of saying all the four major entities that did relatively well have to be included in the government. That's a difficult thing to put together."

END OF COMBAT MISSION

Biden spoke to US television networks a day after President Barack Obama, in an address from the Oval Office, declared an end to the seven-year US combat mission in Iraq.

The US is finishing its combat role at a time when political tensions in Iraq run high. Six months after an inconclusive election, major parties have yet to agree on the shape of a coalition government.

"There's always a possibility long term if this goes on of creating a (power) vacuum, but the truth of the matter is violence is the lowest level it's been since we arrived in 2003," Biden told CBS.

"It takes a while to put together this coalition but I believe they are close to doing that."

Osama al-Nujaifi, a senior leader in Iraqiya, the top vote winner in Iraq's election, thought Biden was being "optimistic" as Iraqi politicians have not agreed yet on who should be the next prime minister.

"Actually there is nothing decisive until now, there is no agreement, there are negotiations and there are programs being studied from Iraqiya and State of Law, but there are disagreements as well," he told Reuters.

"Until now, there is progress, but we can't say it will be soon, within days... I think Mr. Biden was very optimistic."

The cross-sectarian Iraqiya bloc, led by former premier Iyad Allawi, had a two-seat lead over the mainly Shi'ite State of Law alliance of incumbent Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in the March 7 election.

But nearly half a year later, Iraq's Shi'ite, Sunni and Kurdish political factions are still divided on who should hold the nation's highest offices.

Roughly 50,000 US soldiers still in Iraq are moving to an advisory role in which they will train and support Iraq's army and police. Obama has promised to pull all US troops out of Iraq by the end of 2011.

Biden said that a point Obama was making in Tuesday night's speech, in which he touched on the US economy as well as the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, was "at the end of the day our ability to maintain our national security is in fact dependent on the economy."

"What he was really talking about was just as we turn the page and are cooperating as Democrats and Republicans on the issue of Iraq, we should be doing the same thing on the economy," Biden said.



 

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