
REUTERS - could start withdrawing most of its remaining 4,100 troops from
A Ministry of Defence spokeswoman said the progress made in the southern Iraqi city of
The spokesman would not confirm or deny the specific date of March 2009 cited in British newspaper reports as the start date for the final pullout, but said:
"Our position remains that we will judge it on military advice at the time, but there has been significant progress."
She said that thanks to Iraqi, British and coalition efforts,
"As such, we are now expecting to see a fundamental change of mission in early 2009," she added in a statement.
The BBC and several newspapers, quoting an unnamed senior defence source, said a force of several thousand troops would replace the British troops and move into their base at the airport on the outskirts of
Former Prime Minister Tony Blair was U.S. President George W. Bush's strongest ally over the U.S.-led March 2003 invasion to topple Saddam Hussein. Blair sent 45,000 troops to join the U.S.-led military action but the war cost him public support.
Figures compiled through late November show 176 British forces have died in since the invasion.
Gordon Brown, who took over from Blair in June last year, has reduced troop levels in and has signalled that he sees almost all British soldiers leaving Iraq by the middle of next year.
Bringing the troops home could also give him a boost at the next election, due by mid-2010.
In October, Defence Secretary John Hutton said British troops were on track to complete their mission in early next year.
The Guardian newspaper said the withdrawal would start in March, and last troops would
United States General David Petraeus said this week that violence in in the past few weeks had fallen to its lowest level since mid-2003 and that security gains, while still at risk of reversal, were less fragile than before.

