From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. Hopes of Cutting Iraq Troop Levels Dim
The Pentagon extends the tours of 3,500
soldiers to help bolster security in Baghdad.
By Peter Spiegel and Julian E. Barnes
Times Staff Writers
July 28, 2006
WASHINGTON — President Bush's decision to increase the number of U.S.
troops in violence-racked Baghdad has forced commanders to extend the
tours of 3,500 soldiers and appears to eliminate prospects for
significant withdrawals of American forces this year.
Just a month ago, the top commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, Gen. George
W. Casey Jr., came to Washington and presented Bush with a scenario in
which the number of combat brigades in Iraq could be reduced from 14 to
12 by September, with two more brigades scheduled for removal by year's
end. A brigade typically comprises 3,500 soldiers.
Now, even defense officials who talked of reductions are discounting
the prospects of near-term cuts.
"Something has to give," said one defense official, speaking
anonymously because of the sensitivity of deployment plans. "Either we
keep everyone in place or the security plan is not happening."
Shelving withdrawal plans could have political repercussions.
Republican candidates facing antiwar sentiment had been hoping to be
able to point to troops coming home in significant numbers before the
November elections.
The security plan, which Bush outlined Tuesday, calls for boosting the
U.S. troop level in Baghdad to more than 13,000 from 9,000.
The plan's ripple effect became evident Thursday. The Pentagon said the
172nd Stryker Brigade, based in Alaska, would stay in Iraq for up to
four more months. The brigade had been scheduled to return home within
weeks.
The 172nd is expected to be sent to Baghdad from its base in the
northern city of Mosul, an Army official said.
Defense officials fear that if they were to build up the number of
troops in Baghdad while drawing down troop levels in the rest of the
country, cities such as Mosul and Kirkuk, which could quickly flare
into major trouble spots, would be left vulnerable.
In addition to the extended tour for the 172nd Brigade, there have been
other indications that the Pentagon has shelved plans to reduce troop
levels below the current 128,000.
Most tellingly, a Germany-based Army brigade, whose deployment to Iraq
was suspended in May, was ordered two weeks ago to resume preparations.
Another brigade that was sent to Kuwait as a backup force has been
almost completely moved into Iraq.
On Thursday, when Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld approved Casey's
request to extend the 172nd brigade's stay in Iraq, members of the unit
already were preparing to leave.
Last week, the brigade had sent a 170-soldier advance team back to Ft.
Wainwright, Alaska, to prepare for the unit's return. The first 200
members of the brigade's 3,800-soldier main force flew back to Alaska
on Tuesday, Army Maj. Kirk Gohlke, the unit's spokesman, said.
Gohlke said the 172nd's commander, Col. Michael Shields, held a
90-minute videoconference Wednesday night with families in Alaska to
inform them of the plan to extend the tour.
Shields emphasized that the unit had been personally selected by
Rumsfeld for the mission, a sign of how important it was, Gohlke said.
But he acknowledged that families were disappointed.
"The families and the soldiers are human," he said. "They reacted the
way anyone would react."
Rumsfeld addressed the effect of the altered plans Thursday at the
Pentagon.
"If you extend somebody, is there some disappointment that they
wouldn't be home when they thought they might be home? Sure," Rumsfeld
said. "But, as I say, these are professional military, and they're
doing a superb job."
The decision to increase the U.S. presence in Baghdad comes at the same
time as a major operation in western Iraq, already underway for a
month, to take back the Sunni stronghold of Ramadi from insurgents.
It also comes at a time when the U.S. military generally is seen by
many lawmakers and experts as overstretched. In recent days, the Bush
administration has said it will not contribute troops to any
international peacekeeping force for Lebanon.
U.S. military officials in Baghdad have said they hope to show concrete
results in Ramadi by August, which could allow Iraqi forces to take
over more responsibilities in the city. But U.S. troops in Ramadi say
they are loath to quickly pull out for fear of letting the insurgency
rise once more in the city.
Despite the increase in forces in both Baghdad and Ramadi, Army Lt.
Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli, the U.S. officer in charge of day-to-day
operations in Iraq, said in an interview Wednesday that he did not
think the new security plan would make it impossible to draw down
troops in the fall.
The military is not putting a specific timetable on the Baghdad plan,
but like the Ramadi offensive, it is expected to be a long,
manpower-intensive operation that will move through the capital
neighborhood by neighborhood and could take months.
"Not overnight, and we are not going to fix it immediately," Chiarelli
said when asked about the timetable.
The bulk of the new forces in Baghdad probably will come from the 172nd
Brigade and another unit that is currently moving into Iraq from Ft.
Lewis, Wash. That unit, the 3rd Brigade of the 2nd Infantry Division,
is also equipped with Strykers, a new family of combat vehicles that
are more mobile than heavily armored tanks and personnel carriers.
Military officials in Baghdad refused to discuss the specifics of where
the extra troops would come from. But police training teams that were
supposed to be heading north to Kirkuk and Tikrit are expected to be
diverted to Baghdad, as will teams that had been headed west to restive
Al Anbar province, of which Ramadi is the capital.
"It is time to focus, it is time to make Baghdad the main effort,"
Chiarelli said. "This country is Baghdad-centric. I still believe if
you can do things right in Baghdad it will have a tremendous secondary
effect all over those areas we are having problems in now."
*
Spiegel reported from Washington and Barnes from
Baghdad.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times