All South Korean Troops Slated To Leave Iraq By Year’s End
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Thank you South Korea….
September 19, 2008
SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea, which once had the third-largest foreign military contingent in Iraq, will pull all of its troops out off the country on schedule by the end of this year, a military official said on Friday.
Local media had reported the South may extend itsdeployment again as a favour to its major ally, the UnitedStates, which is re-examining its forces in Iraq afterimprovements in overall levels of security this year.
Defence ministry spokesman Won Tae-jae told a news briefingthat when the deployment was extended by one year in December2007, it was on the condition that the pullout would becompleted by the end of 2008.
“And there is no change whatsoever to the plan that everyone in the (unit) would withdraw by the year end,” hesaid.
South Korea sent 3,600 soldiers to Iraq in 2004, which wasthen the largest foreign military presence after the United States and Britain. It has been rolling back its troop levelunder public pressure against the mission.
It now has fewer than 600 troops stationed in a relativelysafe area in the Kurdish north of the country.


