Agencies:
New York Times quoted U.S. officials as senior administration official as saying that the United States is considering a more calm in Iraq and has no intention to send American troops into the country.
But the newspaper quoted one of the officials in the U.S. administration as saying that security in the future and diplomatic relations with Iraq would be "choppy" and depends on the coherence of the Maliki government and the newspaper also noted that U.S. forces may be able to work in Iraq in the tasks of the CIA's secret, such as those that led to the killing of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in the month of May.
In addition, said a spokesman for U.S. forces Jeffrey Buchanan told the newspaper World Tribune of America, that al Qaeda is no longer as strong as in the past, but it still exists in Iraq. Buchanan said that there were about 200 fighters in the al-Qaeda militants and planning assassinations and bombings in Iraq, pointing out that the list includes fighters and workers in the field of media and finance.
For his part, the former deputy director of military operations in Iraq, Gen. Mark Kimmitt, the fear of division of the Iraqi security forces, and the return of the sectarian divide in the country is not addressed in the Iraqi political crisis as soon as possible. Kimmitt said, who served as assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs during the reign of former U.S. President George W. Bush, "Radio Sawa" What the Maliki recently raised a number of constitutional questions about the country's leadership in the future.
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