Baghdad - US Vice President Joe Biden on Saturday said the
United States was committed to withdrawing its soldiers from Iraq by
the end of 2011.
Speaking from Baghdad on US Independence Day, less than a week
after US soldiers withdrew from Iraqi cities, Biden said the White
House would honour pledges to complete the military's withdrawal from
Iraq in two years' time.
'Last week we made good on a commitment to withdraw American
combat troops from Iraqi cities,' Biden said. 'Next summer our combat
troops will leave Iraq itself, and we will be on track to remove all
US forces from Iraq at the end of 2011.'
He was speaking at a ceremony to naturalize 237 soldiers from 59
countries, including Iraq, as US citizens in recognition of their
service in the military.
The ceremony took place in Aw Faw palace, which was built for
Saddam Hussein.
'As corny as it sounds,' Biden said, 'Damn, I'm proud to be an
American.'
'You are the source of our freedom,' the vice president told the
soldiers. 'You and all who came before you. I want to thank you from
the bottom of my heart.'
Biden thanked them for their sacrifices. 'You've lost comrades,'
he said, noting that 4,322 US soldiers had been killed in Iraq, and
more than 30,000 had been wounded.
General Ray Odierno, the US military's commander in Iraq,
remembered the phrase inscribed on the Statue of Liberty, 'Give me
your tired, your poor.'
'To be honest,' he said. 'I'm not so sure that its legendary
inscription is applicable to this group here today, because when I
look at the men and women sitting out in front of me here, I don't
see them in terms of tired, poor.'
'I would say give me your best, your brightest and your bravest,'
the general said. 'Give me your warriors your heroes who will enhance
our great nation and strive to keep her free.'
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