http://blogs.usatoday.com/ondeadline/2007/10/list-of-countri.htmlALBANIA: 120 non-combat troops, mainly patrolling airport in Mosul; no plans to withdraw.
ARMENIA: 46 soldiers, serving as medics, engineers and transport drivers, serving under Polish command; mission extended to end of 2007.
AUSTRALIA: 550 troops helping to train security forces in two southern Iraqi provinces; no plans to withdraw.
AZERBAIJAN: 150 troops, mostly serving as sentries, on patrols and protecting dam near city of Hadid; no plans to withdraw.
BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA: 36 soldiers, including three teams of 10 officers and a command team of six.
BRITAIN: 5,000 troops in southern Iraq; Prime Minister Gordon Brown says 2,500 to come home next spring.
BULGARIA: 155 in total, including 120 non-combat troops guarding refugee camp north of Baghdad and 35 support personnel.
CZECH REPUBLIC: 100 troops; government working on plan for gradual withdrawal; no timetable.
EL SALVADOR: 300 soldiers doing peacekeeping and humanitarian work in southern city of Kut; cuts expected as situation improves.
ESTONIA: 35 troops serving under U.S. command in the Baghdad area.
GEORGIA: About 2,000 soldiers and support personnel in Kut; government to cut contingent to around 300 by next summer.
KAZAKHSTAN: 27 military engineers; no plans to withdraw.
MACEDONIA: 40 troops in Taji, north of Baghdad.
MOLDOVA: 11 bomb-defusing experts.
MONGOLIA: 160 troops; no plans to withdraw.
NETHERLANDS: 15 soldiers as part of NATO mission training police, army officers; no plans to withdraw.
POLAND: 900 non-combat troops; commands multinational force south of Baghdad; mission extended to end of 2007; government says decision on any withdrawal will wait until after 2008 U.S. elections.
ROMANIA: About 600 troops, most serving in the south under British command, with the rest — a few dozen military intelligence officers — serving north of Baghdad; President Traian Basescu, the commander-in-chief, says they will stay.
SLOVENIA: Four instructors training Iraqi security forces.
SOUTH KOREA: 1,200 troops in northern Iraqi city of Irbil; government now assessing whether to extend or end mission.
UNITED STATES: Approximately 168,000 troops; Bush plan would reduce total next summer to at least 130,000 troops.