Despite the claims of some Republicans, including McCain, we are not winning in Iraq.
The new US military commander in Iraq, Lt Gen Ray Odierno, has said that recent security gains there are "fragile and reversible".
He was speaking in Baghdad at a ceremony to replace Gen David Petraeus.
Gen Petraeus, who implemented the "surge" of nearly 30,000 extra US troops in Iraq, is widely credited with driving down levels of violence there.
He has been promoted to oversee operations in Afghanistan and in the Middle East, including Iraq.
He will take up the post as head of the US Central Command in late October, working from its headquarters in Tampa, Florida.
Gen Petraeus handed the command of the 146,000-strong US force at a ceremony in one of Saddam Hussein's former palaces on the outskirts of the capital.
He thanked his troops and hailed his successor as "the perfect man for the job".
Gen Odierno said he was aware of the tough task ahead, adding that the Iraqi people must take charge as "the struggle is theirs to win".
He said: "Iraq is now a different country from the one I had seen first. However, we must realise that these gains are fragile and reversible."
Presiding over the ceremony, the US Secretary of Defence, Robert Gates, said the two generals had formed an "incredible team" while implementing the "surge" plan in 2007.
He said that Gen Odierno, who served as deputy commander in Iraq for 15 months, knew "we are at a pivotal moment where progress remains fragile and caution should be the order of the day".
[...]In a BBC interview before his departure, Gen Petraeus said he would never declare victory in Iraq and that the US still faced a "long struggle" in the country.
When asked if US troops could withdraw from Iraqi cities by the middle of next year, he said that would be "doable".
Mr Bush has announced a cut of 8,000 US troops in Iraq by February - with some 4,500 being sent to Afghanistan.
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