From the Los Angeles Times
Gates and Petraeus differ over troop levels in Iraq
Contradictory remarks about the possible
renewal of troop withdrawals reveal a Pentagon rift.
By Peter Spiegel and Julian E. Barnes
Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
April 11, 2008
WASHINGTON —
President Bush, accepting the recommendation of Army Gen. David H.
Petraeus to halt the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq in July,
said Thursday that he would give the war commander "all the time he
needs" to decide on future troop cuts.
But
in a surprising show of public concern about an open-ended U.S.
commitment, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates told a Senate hearing
that he hoped to resume troop reductions soon after a "brief" 45-day
pause this summer.
Gates' comments, along with similar testimony
from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were in stark contrast
to those of Petraeus, who spent two days this week on Capitol Hill
telling lawmakers that it could be months before conditions in Iraq
permitted further troop withdrawals.
Differences within the
Pentagon over the issue have been brewing for months, but rarely have
they been aired publicly. Democrats on the Senate Armed Services
Committee seized on the contrasts, prompting Gates to acknowledge that
there is a difference in the way he and Petraeus view troop levels.
"My
view is that [Petraeus] should be in a position at the end of that
45-day period of evaluation and consolidation to make a determination
whether a next further drawdown could take place," Gates said. "One of
the benefits of being secretary of Defense, I suppose, is that I'm more
allowed to hope than the field commander is."
U.S. officials are
in the process of withdrawing additional units sent last year as part
of the troop buildup. Once the last of those units leave, in July,
Petraeus will have at least 45 days before contemplating further troop
cuts under the recommendation approved by Bush. But Gates and Petraeus
appear to differ over how long commanders should take before deciding
on further troop withdrawals.
Petraeus has been pressing to keep force levels as high as possible,
winning a sympathetic ear from Bush.
In
a televised address announcing that he had accepted Petraeus'
recommendation, Bush said he would cut the length of Army tours from 15
months to a year starting with units deployed after Aug. 1. In the
address, Bush also set a high bar for troop withdrawals.
"The
day will come when Iraq is a stable democracy that helps fight our
common enemies and promote our common interests in the Middle East,"
Bush said, aiming his comments at U.S. troops and civilians in Iraq.
"When that day arrives, you'll come home with pride in your success and
the gratitude of your whole nation."
But members of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff have repeatedly expressed concern that frequent
deployments have strained U.S. ground forces and depleted resources
needed elsewhere, particularly in Afghanistan. Gates has been
sympathetic to them but has mostly mediated differences.
The
Pentagon leadership is under new pressure to find additional troops to
send to Afghanistan to fulfill a commitment Bush made at a NATO summit
last month, a senior Defense official said.
But Pentagon
planners will only be able to supply those troops if further cuts in
Iraq this year bring the size of the force there below 140,000 troops,
or 15 brigades.
"It is everyone's desire to get below 15," said the Defense official,
who was not authorized to speak publicly on troop levels.
On
Capitol Hill, Gates emphasized that all members of the military
leadership, including Adm. Michael G. Mullen, the Joint Chiefs
chairman, supported Petraeus' recommendation that there be a 45-day
suspension of troop cuts.
But Mullen, testifying with Gates,
said that U.S. units could continue to train Iraqi forces and prod the
Iraqi government toward political reconciliation while the number of
troops was reduced.
"I see no reason why we cannot accomplish
these goals while also keeping open the option of an informed drawdown
of forces throughout the remainder of this year," Mullen said.
Mullen
spoke with added urgency about Afghanistan, where 31,000 U.S. troops
are fighting. In Afghanistan, Mullen said, "we do what we can. But
doing what we can in Afghanistan is not doing all that we should."
The
comments by Gates and Mullen set up a potential confrontation this
fall, just weeks before the U.S. presidential election. The Pentagon,
worried about having enough troops for Afghanistan, may insist on cuts
in the Iraq force. But such a stance would clash with Petraeus and
other commanders, who want high troop levels through October for Iraq's
provincial elections.
Gates described the cessation of troop withdrawals in July as a "brief
pause." Both Petraeus and Bush avoided using those words.
"There
is clearly a disagreement in rhetoric," said Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.),
the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman. "Clearly, there is a
clash."
Despite the differences, there was also broad accord
among the U.S. political and military leadership during a day of public
appearances. Bush, Gates, Mullen and Petraeus all agreed that the
15-month troop buildup had reduced violence and enabled the start of
economic redevelopment and political reconciliation.
Bush argued
that the buildup had changed the course of the war and revived
prospects for success. Those who have argued that further troop
reductions would put needed pressure on the Iraqi government to stand
on its own are wrong, he said.
"The Iraqis are a proud people,"
Bush said at the White House, standing before military veterans and
members of his Cabinet. "But they know that they still need our help
until they can stand by themselves."
Mullen, who serves as the
president's chief military advisor, told senators that future political
progress depends on the willingness of Iraqi leaders to make difficult
decisions. "Our troops can open many doors, but they cannot force Iraqi
leaders through them," he said.
Democratic leaders denounced
Bush's upbeat description, pointing to recent violence and attacks on
Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, where U.S. operations are based.
"The
president still doesn't understand that America's limited resources
cannot support this endless war that he's gotten us involved in," said
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).
In his address, Bush
again warned Iran against training and funding militant Shiite
militias. "If Iran makes the wrong choice, America will act to protect
our interests and our troops and our Iraqi partners," Bush said,
without specifying possible action.
U.S. officials have accused
Iran of contributing to recent violence in Iraq through its support of
extremists. The violence has spilled into formerly peaceful Baghdad
neighborhoods, including the Shiite stronghold of Sadr City, where
militants loyal to cleric Muqtada Sadr have battled U.S. and Iraqi
forces for two weeks.
Fighting erupted there again Tuesday, with
two U.S. airstrikes to destroy suspected rocket locations. U.S.
officials provided no casualty figures, but Iraqi police said seven
people were killed and 18 wounded in the strikes.
Separately,
the U.S. military announced that an American soldier died earlier this
week when his vehicle struck a roadside bomb in central Baghdad. The
incident raised American troop deaths to 20 in April. U.S. fatalities
have jumped since March 25, the start of an Iraqi-led offensive in
Basra.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times