Beirut, December 8, 2011 (AKnews) - noted British journalist famous Stephen Farrell that the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq is in "the invisible", and was amazed at the report written by the newspaper "New York Times," the U.S. how to leave the U.S. the country without a significant impact on the street, in the time, everyone was expected to have this event more of an impact. says Farrell said that this makes the Iraqis as if they were in disbelief that the withdrawal is actually as difficult for them to understand the policy adopted by the major powers and oil interests in dealing with things, and therefore P "and the fact that they do not see, them do not believe. " says Farrell, "You can spend hours of time and you are going on in the streets of Baghdad and other cities, and can not monitor the vehicle U.S. and one in the place, unless you're on the highway where moving some of the vehicles the U.S. to Kuwait .. or if vacated on the Green Zone for hours may be able to monitor, among Iraqi checkpoints many, one of American contractors, who resides in a place near the embassy, accompanied by a guard dog. " The Farrell "invisible" U.S., in part, that the Americans were absent for a long time,'s Iraq after the year 2008 is not the Iraq between 2003 and 2008, when the mechanisms of U.S. military filled the place and cover all the streets of Iraq. and explains Farrell that the mechanisms of U.S. military, specifically the "Humvee" (an automated multi-function high performance), is still heavily present, but now with the Iraqis and signs of the Iraqi army or Iraqi police. The Baghdad from the top, according to Farrell, For they are, where "still covering the skies sounds of war, through the helicopter that anyone can monitor heavily flying, and on landing in the region Green near the U.S. Embassy .. but I disagree is the increased number of Iraqi aircraft. " On the other hand, Farrell says that "the growing Iraqi security presence on the ground, did not prevent the Iraqis from the question about the future of the country after the withdrawal, and whether the Iraqi security forces able to fill the security vacuum, "pointing out that" a climate of tension and hostility controls the Iraqi airspace and enhance the fear of the danger of sliding into sectarian violence again. " but the author quotes many Iraqis are optimistic, "because people here are tired of fighting, and the war years long, it is not unlikely that you get some sporadic incidents, after the war, but it will not slip into a real war. " From: Khalil al-Khalil, the Open: Peace Baghdadi
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