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Last US troops to leave Iraq cross Kuwait border | Last US troops to leave Iraq cross Kuwait border |
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The last convoy of US troops to leave Iraq has entered Kuwait, nearly nine years after the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein. | |
The final column of about 100 armoured vehicles carrying 500 soldiers crossed the southern Iraqi desert overnight. | |
At the peak of the operation there were 170,000 US troops and more than 500 bases in Iraq. | |
Nearly 4,500 US soldiers and tens of thousands of Iraqis have died since the US-led campaign began in 2003. | |
The operation has cost Washington nearly $1 trillion (£643bn). | |
US troops have trained up Iraqi security forces which, if they stick together, can arguably contain the internal security situation, still stubbornly jammed at a level of violence which kills on average around 350 people every month. | |
But security has to be rooted in political stability, and that's only one of many challenges immediately facing Iraq. | |
Even as the final US troops were heading for the border, a political crisis was erupting in Baghdad, with deputies from Ayyad Allawi's Iraqiyya block pulling out of parliament. | |
There is turmoil in two mainly Sunni provinces, which want to declare themselves autonomous regions like the Kurds in the north. There's also a widespread conviction that with the Americans gone, Iranian influence will spread. | |
While most Iraqis believe it was high time for the Americans to go, many are deeply worried about the challenges that lie ahead. | |
US forces ended combat missions in Iraq in 2010 and had already handed over much of their security role. | |
"(It's) a good feeling... knowing this is going to be the last mission out of here," said Private First Class Martin Lamb, part of the final "tactical road march" out of Iraq. | |
"Part of history, you know - we're the last ones out." | |
As the last of the armoured vehicles crossed the border, a gate was closed behind them and US and Kuwaiti soldiers gathered there to shake hands and pose for pictures. | |
The only US military presence left in Iraq now is 157 soldiers responsible for training at the US embassy, as well as a small contingent of marines protecting the diplomatic mission. | The only US military presence left in Iraq now is 157 soldiers responsible for training at the US embassy, as well as a small contingent of marines protecting the diplomatic mission. |
The low-key US exit was in stark contact to the blaze of aerial bombardment Washington unleashed against Saddam Hussein in 2003. | |
Tribute | Tribute |
US President Barack Obama marked the end of the war earlier in the week, meeting Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. | |
He announced in October that all US troops would leave Iraq by the end of 2011, a date previously agreed by former President George W Bush in 2008. | |
In a recent speech at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, President Obama paid tribute to the soldiers who had served in Iraq. | |
He acknowledged that the war had been controversial, but told returning troops they were leaving behind "a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq". | He acknowledged that the war had been controversial, but told returning troops they were leaving behind "a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq". |
However, correspondents say there are concerns in Washington that Iraq lacks robust political structures or an ability to defend its borders. | However, correspondents say there are concerns in Washington that Iraq lacks robust political structures or an ability to defend its borders. |
There are also fears that Iraq could be plunged back into sectarian bloodletting, or be unduly influenced by Iran. | There are also fears that Iraq could be plunged back into sectarian bloodletting, or be unduly influenced by Iran. |
Washington had wanted to keep a small training and counter-terrorism presence in Iraq, but US officials were unable to strike a deal with Baghdad on legal issues including immunity for troops. |