Iraq's unity government sworn into office   (AP)  Updated: 2006-05-21 10:12  
BAGHDAD, Iraq - After five months of often bitter wrangling over Cabinet 
posts, Iraq's unity government took office and vowed to fight the insurgency, 
restore stability and set the stage for the eventual withdrawal of U.S. and 
other foreign troops. 
 
 
 
 
   Iraq's new parliament holds 
 inauguration.[Xinhuanet] |   
As the Cabinet was sworn in Saturday, at least 33 people were killed in a 
series of attacks across Iraq, and police found the bodies of 22 Iraqis who 
apparently had been kidnapped and tortured by death squads that plague the 
capital and other areas. 
 The new permanent government resulting from December's elections in which 12 
million Iraqis participated has been portrayed by Western officials as the best 
hope for changing the dynamics of violence in Iraq. But it must expand control 
and persuade insurgents, assassins and militias to stand down, with no guarantee 
of success. 
 U.S. President George W. Bush, who is facing rising criticism at home over 
Iraq, welcomed the new Cabinet and promised continued help from the United 
States. 
 "The United States and freedom-loving nations around the world will stand 
with Iraq as it takes its place among the world's democracies and as an ally in 
the war on terror," Bush said in a statement. 
 U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad repeated U.S. cautions against expectations 
of a quick pullout of the 132,000-strong American military contingent. But, he 
added, "strategically, we're going to be moving in the direction of downsizing 
our forces." 
 Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and the others on the 40-member Cabinet took 
the oath of office inside the heavily fortified Green Zone in central Baghdad, 
where American and Iraqi troops provide security from the turmoil sweeping the 
country. 
 After a two-hour delay, reportedly because of 
last-minute wrangling over some Cabinet posts, legislators dressed in suits or 
traditional Arab robes slowly filed into the parliament chamber. Outgoing 
members of the interim legislature greeted each other with kisses to the cheeks. 
  
 
 
 
    
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