U.S. Prepares for Iraq Pullout
Associated Press | August 03, 2005
http://www.military.com/NewsContent/0,13319,FL_pullout_080305,00.html?ESRC=eb.nl
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon is laying the groundwork for beginning a withdrawal
from Iraq, even as it is weighing the risk of moving so quickly that Iraqi
security forces collapse without U.S. support.
The benefits of a U.S. drawdown are pretty clear. Fewer troops would likely
mean fewer casualties and less strain on the Army and Marine Corps, which
already are stretched thin. And it would lessen the degree to which the
presence of foreign forces fuels an anti-U.S. insurgency.
There are now about 138,000 U.S. troops in Iraq in a war with dwindling
popularity among American voters.
At best, a U.S. drawdown would begin shortly after elections for a new
government in Baghdad, scheduled for December. That assumes two other
difficult political milestones are achieved first: drafting a constitution by
Aug. 15 and holding a national referendum in mid-October to approve the
constitution.
It also assumes the insurgency does not get worse - and that Iraqi security
forces prove themselves ready for combat.
If the U.S. were to withdraw before the Iraqis were ready, the American
sacrifices of the past 2 1/2 years could be lost - and President Bush would
face pressure to explain why the invasion was worth it.
Even though Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has not yet received even a
recommendation from commanders on when to start the pullout, he has been
talking more directly in recent days about the security transition.
"Once Iraq is safely in the hands of the Iraqi people, and a government they
elected under a new constitution, our troops will be able to come home with
the honor they have earned," Rumsfeld said in a speech prepared for the Dallas
Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Rumsfeld delivered only abbreviated remarks by
telephone after his plane had mechanical problems.
Noticeably absent from his comments was any assertion that defeating the
insurgency is one of the conditions for an American withdrawal.
In Rumsfeld's view, shared by top U.S. commanders in Iraq, it must be left to
the Iraqis to overcome the insurgency. Likewise, the Iraqis must be prodded to
take the lead in other areas of their struggle to rebuild.
Among the signs that the United States is pressing a faster transition to
Iraqi-led security, to open the way for a U.S. withdrawal:
- After taking up his post last month as U.S. ambassador to Baghdad, Zalmay
Khalilzad announced the creation of a U.S.-Iraq task force to develop a
strategy and conditions for transferring the security responsibility from the
U.S.-led coalition forces to the Iraqis. "Our common goal is to help Iraq
stand on its own feet as quickly as possible," Khalilzad said, adding that
this would allow for a phased U.S. pullout.
- Last weekend Iraqi police and a brigade of the 5th Iraqi Army Division
formally took full control of an area in Diyala Province, to the northeast of
Baghdad, known as Khalis Qadah, replacing a U.S. Army unit. Col. Archie Davis,
spokesman for Gen. George Casey, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, said the
transition was made because the Iraqis had demonstrated their proficiency at
fighting the insurgents without U.S. support.
- Mowaffak Rubaie, Iraq's national security adviser, said Monday that several
cities in the more stable south and north had been identified as areas where
withdrawal of foreign forces could likely start soon. The cities included
Najaf, Karbala, Samawah, Diwaniyah and Nasiriyah in the heavily Shiite Muslim
south, and possibly Irbil and Sulaymaniyah in the predominantly Kurdish north.
The battle against the insurgency brought another stark reminder Tuesday of
the cost in U.S. lives of remaining in Iraq. Military officials announced that
seven Marines were killed in action on Monday, pushing the total number of
U.S. deaths in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion beyond the 1,800 mark. More
than 13,700 have been wounded.
Iraqis - both civilians and security forces - have taken the lion's share of
the casualties in recent months as U.S. troops have deliberately scaled back
their unilateral combat missions to operate more with Iraqi forces. There are
now more than 180,000 Iraqi police and army troops that have been trained and
equipped by U.S. forces.
On a visit to Iraq last week, Rumsfeld drew a direct link between American
combat deaths and the urgency of getting the Iraqis to complete a constitution
by Aug. 15.
"We have troops on the ground there. People are getting killed," Rumsfeld
said, adding that "political progress is necessary to defeat the insurgency."
===============
CNN.com - Bush vows to fire anyone who committed crime in CIA leak ...
... that if anyone committed a crime in connection with the leak of a CIA
agent's identity, ... Bush vows to fire anyone who committed crime in CIA leak
...
MORE:>.
I think folks are off-focus on Novak's latest. Here's the money quote: "CIA
...
This is bullshit. If a source lies to you (which is slightly different than
...
MORE:>>
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