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U.S. says may not need to order diplomats to Iraq
16 Nov 2007 16:05:05 GMT
Source: Reuters
WASHINGTON, Nov 16 (Reuters) - The U.S. State Department said on Friday it may not need to force diplomats to serve in Iraq as enough staff have volunteered to go to the war zone.

Last month, the department said it might have to order some diplomats to Iraq, where many foreign service officers are reluctant to work because violence still rages four years after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled President Saddam Hussein.

Because of a lack of volunteers, the State Department had roughly 50 spots at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and at joint U.S. military-diplomatic provincial reconstruction teams around the country that it could not fill.

"It appears that we are getting very nearly to the point where we will have volunteers for all of the open, identified jobs," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters. "We have candidates identified for all the jobs."

The possibility that the department might order some of its people to Iraq had upset U.S. diplomats, including one who publicly called this a "potential death sentence." (Writing by Arshad Mohammed; editing by Sue Pleming and Mohammad Zargham)
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A family eats a meal inside their tent in a refugee camp in Najaf November 21, 2007. Some Western aid groups driven from Iraq in recent years are cautiously coming back, weighing the danger to their staff against the lives they may save among increasingly desperate Iraqis. To match feature IRAQ AID. REUTERS/Ali Abu Shish (IRAQ)



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