Sofia - Bulgaria would consider a pullout of its troops from
the international military contingent in Iraq, Foreign Minister
Ivaylo Kalfin was quoted as saying Thursday.
'We are analyzing our presence (in Iraq), but believe that our
mission is largely accomplished,' Kalfin told reporters after a
ministerial meeting in Brussels on Wednesday.
It was not the first time the pullout is discussed in Sofia -
Socialist Premier Sergey Stanishev promised to end the unpopular
mission in Iraq already in his election campaign in 2005.
Despite Stanishev's pledge and the 13 casualties suffered in what
many Bulgarians feel is not their war, Bulgaria remained among the
staunch European supporters of US policy in Iraq and has kept its
troops there since August 2003.
Sofia so far only downsized the contingent from more than 500 to
155 and moved it to a safer location in Baghdad.
Bulgaria must decide by the end of November whether to renew the
mission in Iraq, or start to end it, possibly replacing the troops
with a civilian mission - which is another option that has been
brought up by officials in the past.
The Balkan country, which joined NATO in 2004 and the European
Union in 2007, is due to hold regular parliamentary elections in the
middle of 2009, at a date yet to be announced.
Stanishev leads a grand coalition with the conservative National
Movement party of former premier Simeon Saxe Coburg-Gotha and the
Movement for Rights and Freedom of ethnic Turks since 2005.
Under huge pressure from a new party, headed by the popular former
mayor of Sofia, Boyko Borissov, Stanishev and his allies have a few
weeks to weigh effects of the Iraq decision on their internal rating,
but also on relations with the upcoming administration in Washington.
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