voa标准英语2008年-Iraqi Parliament Approves Military Pact With US(在线收听) | ||
The Iraqi parliament has voted to approve a controversial military pact with the United States that will allow U.S. troops to remain in the country for three more years. The new pact will replace a U.N. mandate which expires on December 31. Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki hailed the deal's approval as a historic, important achievement in restoring Iraq's sovereignty. Edward Yeranian reports for VOA from Cairo. The Iraqi parliament session got under way after intense behind the scenes negotiations between different factions, and the vote on the new military pact between Iraq and the U.S. was approved by a comfortable margin, albeit less than the overwhelming consensus vote that some had been predicting. Government spokesman Ali Debbagh said the vote to approve the pact represented a major achievement by the government and a national consensus of all Iraqi political factions. He says that Iraq is now entering a period of peace and restoration of its sovereignty, in addition to a new relation with the United States. He says Iraqi forces will have more responsibility for security in the country in the countdown towards a U.S. withdrawal. U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker congratulated the Iraqi government and parliament, after the vote, adding that he hoped the accord would also be approved by Iraq's Presidential Council. "The agreements," he said, "formalize a strong and equal partnership between the U.S. and Iraq…..and provide the means to secure the significant security gains that we have achieved together and to deter future aggression."
Opponents of the pact, including the 30-member bloc loyal to cleric Muqtada Sadr, waved posters denouncing the accord and tried to disrupt the vote with periodic outbursts during the session, thumping on chairs and clapping their hands. Sadr's supporters called the accord "void, and unlawful." | ||
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2008/11/66562.html |