USA  TODAY        2/11/2007
 SYDNEY, Australia (AP)  Australia's conservative prime  minister slammed Barack Obama on Sunday over his opposition to the Iraq war, a  day after the first-term U.S. senator announced his intention to run for the  White House in 2008.
 Obama said Saturday at his campaign kickoff in Springfield,  Ill., that one of the country's first priorities should be ending the war in  Iraq. He has also introduced a bill in the Senate to prevent President Bush from  increasing American troop levels in Iraq and to remove U.S. combat forces from  the country by March 31, 2008.
 Australian Prime Minister John Howard, a staunch Bush ally who  has sent troops to Iraq and faces his own re-election bid later this year, said  Obama's proposals would spell disaster for the Middle East.
 "I think that will just encourage those who want to completely  destabilize and destroy Iraq, and create chaos and a victory for the terrorists  to hang on and hope for an Obama victory," Howard said on Nine Network  television.
 "If I were running al-Qaeda in Iraq, I would put a circle  around March 2008 and be praying as many times as possible for a victory, not  only for Obama but also for the Democrats."
 Howard has defied widespread domestic opposition to the war,  keeping about 1,400 Australian troops in and around Iraq, mostly in non-combat  roles. He is seeking a fifth term later this year, and recent polls suggest  voters are increasingly unhappy about his refusal to set a deadline for  withdrawing Australian troops from the Middle East.
 "You either rat on the ally or you stay with the ally," he  said. "If it's all right for us to go, it's all right for the Americans and the  British to go, and if everybody goes, Iraq will descend into total civil war and  there'll be a lot of bloodshed."
 
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