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US
military chief signals changes ahead in Iraq strategy
By
Jim Mannion
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com 11 11 06
US military leaders are making their own reassessment of the course
in Iraq, the top US military officer said Friday, signaling major changes
ahead with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's departure.
"We should not expect to go with a plan that's chipped in stone
and stay with that plan no matter what," said General Peter Pace,
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Key questions facing any new regime at the Pentagon will be whether
to surge more US troops into the country to smother sectarian violence,
and whether to move more aggressively against Shiite militias at the
source of much of the bloodshed.
Last week, before his abrupt resignation, Rumsfeld and his generals
opted to avoid a confrontation over the militias with Shiite Prime Minister
Nuri al-Maliki in favor of a more rapid transition of the US-trained
Iraqi military to government control.
Pace, in a series of television interviews and in comments to reporters,
gave no hint of what the military brass will recommend to Rumsfeld's
designated replacement, former CIA chief Robert Gates.
But he said he and the two top commanders responsible for the war in
Iraq -- General John Abizaid and General George Casey -- were each taking
a hard look at what the military is doing in Iraq.
"We need to give ourselves a good, honest scrub about what is working,
what is not working, what are the impediments to progress, and what
should we change about the way we're doing it, to ensure that we get
to the objective that we have set for ourselves," Pace said in
an interview with CBS television.
"We're making our recommendations. We're having our dialogue. And
we'll make the changes that are needed to get ourselves more focused
on the correct objectives," he said.
Pentagon officials said Pace has convened a study group of his own in
the Joint Staff, bringing in mid-level strategists with recent experience
in Iraq for fresh insights.
Each of the military services were asked to make them available for
60 days, an official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Among the participants is Army Colonel H.R. McMaster, who commanded
the cavalry regiment that retook the insurgent stronghold of Tall Afar
a year ago in what has been touted as a classic counterinsurgency operation.
Pace told reporters that he will be meeting Monday with the Iraqi Study
Group, a bipartisan panel that has emerged as a key outside player in
redirecting US strategy in Iraq.
The group, which is led by former secretary of state James Baker and
former representative Lee Hamilton, counted Gates among its members.
Even though he is now expected to recuse himself from its deliberations,
his presence gives added clout to the group's recommendations, which
are expected to be made public this month.
The New York Times reported Friday that a close friend said Gates returned
from a recent trip to Iraq with the group expressing disbelief that
Rumsfeld had not responded more quickly to the deteriorating security
situation.
During the visit, Gates asked whether more US troops in Baghdad could
stem the violence, and whether the training of Iraqi troops could be
overhauled, but didn't take a view himself, the Times said.
Casey, who has beefed up US troop levels in Iraq to about 150,000 and
concentrated them in Baghdad because of an onslaught of sectarian violence,
said last month that adding more US troops had proved to have some effect
in localized situations.
"But whether more US troops for a sustained period will get us
where we're going faster is an open question," he said. "And
that's part of the calculations that I make as I go through this."
Rumsfeld's departure is likely to open debate on what size force the
United States needs to stabilize Iraq, as well as on the conditions
and timelines for their withdrawal, a key demand by Democrats.
Other challenges will be how to induce the Iraqi government to move
more decisively to rein in the militias and reconcile with Sunnis; and
to deal with a series of other political issues -- including oil and
regional autonomy -- which are pulling the country apart.
AFP
101952 GMT 11 06
Copyright©
2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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