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US military announces 10,000 more post-surge troops
in Iraq
By Naomi Spencer
27 February 2008
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On Monday, the US military announced that the number of troops
in Iraq following the surge begun last year will be
some 10,000 more than pre-surge levels. What was originally presented
as a temporary increase of US occupation forces will result in
the indefinite presence of 140,000 US soldiers in Iraq.
Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff operations director Carter Ham
told reporters during a press conference that by July of 2008,
the total standing occupation force would be reduced to 15 brigades
from 20 brigades at the height of the surge, still leaving 8,000
of the 30,000 additional forces introduced under the surge.
Ham refused to give an estimate of troop levels by the end
of Bushs presidential term, calling it premature
to talk of future reductions. This will be very much conditions-based,
he said.
Hams remarks came two weeks after US Defense Secretary
Robert Gates said a pause in the drawdown of US forces
probably does make sense.
Ham said that many of the additional troops are needed for
guarding the extensive detention operations the US
maintains in Iraq, an allusion to the tens of thousands of additional
Iraqis who have been imprisoned by the US in the course of the
surge.
The increased number of US troops has been used to carry out
massive aerial bombardments and the violent repression of resistance
to the US colonial-style occupation. Sectarian violence has been
diminished through deals made between the US military and sections
of the Sunni and Shiite elite, together with a process of ethnic
cleansing, overseen by the US military, that has transformed large
sections of the country into exclusive Shiite and Sunni zones.
The continued crisis of the Iraq occupation has exacerbated
tensions within the US ruling elite and among the military brass.
Some military leaders are particularly concerned about the
effect the length and frequency of deployments to Iraq has had
on morale among the volunteer forces. In order to build up troop
numbers for the surge last year, deployments were extended from
12 to 15 months, and downtime between deployments was curtailed.
Long and harrowing deployments have compounded stress and disillusionment
within the military, leading many soldiers and officers to resign.
Some within the political establishment have also argued that
a drawdown in Iraq is necessary in order to shift more forces
to Afghanistan and to be better prepared for any future military
conflict.
Ham said the Pentagon was considering reducing soldier deployment
lengths from 15 to 12 months, but would not make any decision
until the end of July.
For months, the assertion that the surge is working
has been the talking point for the Bush administration and military
leaders, most prominently David Petraeus, the commanding general
of operations in Iraq.
On Friday, in an interview with the military news site Military.com,
Petraeus said he had persuaded Central Command chief Admiral William
Fallon and Defense secretary Robert Gates, as well as members
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to curtail the drawdown in favor
of a conditions-based approach. Some members of the
Joint Chiefs, including the chairman, Admiral Mike Mullen, have
said they favor a withdrawal of 10 brigades by the end of 2008.
There are two major factors behind the decision to maintain
elevated troop levels. First, the situation in Iraq is extremely
unstable for the US occupation. Despite talk of political stabilization
and sectarian reconciliation, the reality is that US troops are
facing an extremely volatile situation.
Second, the military decision is undoubtedly conditioned by
the electoral and political calculations of the Bush administration
and the Republican Party. Bush is determined to avoid a resurgence
of violence in Iraq prior to the 2008 elections.
Within Iraq, there are growing signs of rebellion within the
Sunni militias that have allied with the US. The Awakening Council
in Diyala province has halted cooperation with the US occupation
and the Iraqi government, charging that local Shiite police have
continued to kill Sunnis. Another Sunni militia near Baghdad recently
suspended its collaboration with US forces.
In Anbar province, the Sunni Awakening Council has threatened
to overthrow the provincial government if the government does
not resign by April.
Tensions are also mounting in relation to US support for Turkish
incursions in the north of the country. Turkey is seeking to counter
moves by Kurdish authorities to form a more autonomous government.
US backing for Turkeys attacks on Kurdish Iraq threatens
to disrupt the longstanding US alliance with the Kurdish nationalists.
Meanwhile, the Kurdish elite and the Iraqi government are at odds
over the control of the oil-rich region of Kirkuk.
Military leaders are well aware that the US policy of divide
and rule, combined with continued mass hostility to the US occupation,
is a constant source of instability. Reported Iraqi civilian and
security force deaths so far in February have already well surpassed
those of the previous few months. According to a count by Icasualties.org,
622 Iraqis have been killed in February, compared to 554 in January
and 548 in December.
In addition, the past few weeks have seen an increase in US
troop casualties, with the US total death toll approaching 4,000.
In the past two weeks, 20 US soldiers have died in Iraq, mainly
from hostile fire and improvised explosive devices in and around
Baghdad.
At the same time, the background to internal discussions of
US policy in Iraq is the 2008 presidential election.
Arizona Senator John McCain, certain to be the Republican nominee,
is running on a no surrender platform based on the
assertion that the surge has been a success and will serve as
a model for future wars. The ability to keep a lid on violence
is therefore critical. During campaigning in Ohio Monday, McCain
told reporters that if he failed to convince voters that the surge
was successful, I lose... Is there any doubt?
At a town-hall meeting in Ohio on Monday, McCain touted the
progress made in Iraq as a result of the troop buildup. They
were wrong, Senator Clinton and Senator Obama, when they said
that the surge would fail. And they were wrong when they said
that the political process would not move forward.
The Republican Party will base its election campaign on the
defense of the Iraq war, while attempting to portray its Democratic
opponent as soft on terror for making limited appeals
to antiwar sentiment.
In fact, the ongoing and escalated US military occupation of
Iraq has only been possible because at every step the Democrats
have opposed any serious action to halt the buildup. While maintaining
tactical criticisms, the Democratic-controlled Congress has repeatedly
passed war funding bills with no constraints, giving the Bush
administration a free hand to wage war. Behind the disputes over
policy there is an underlying unanimity on maintaining US military
domination in the Middle East.
See also:
Turkish forces push deeper into Kurdish
northern Iraq
[25 February 2008]
Iraq: US occupation faces crisis of its
own making
[21 February 2008]
US Defense Secretary sides with military
opposition to troop drawdown in Iraq
[14 February 2008]
Iraqi parliament in turmoil as sectarian
rivalries flare
[11 February 2008]
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