General Says Most Troops Home by 2008
Essay by review • February 27, 2011 • Essay • 423 Words (2 Pages) • 954 Views
Citing U.S. officials with knowledge of a classified Pentagon briefing this week by Gen. George Casey, the Times said the first cuts would come in September, and the number of U.S. combat brigades in Iraq is then projected to fall to five or six from the current level of 14 by the end of next year.
The withdrawals are greater than many experts and analysts had expected, the Times said on its Web site in a story to be published in its Sunday edition. The officials spoke of the Pentagon briefing on condition of anonymity, and some described the plan as more of a forecast than a hard timeline.
According to the newspaper, the plan envisions the first reductions coming in September, ahead of November's U.S. midterm elections, with two of the 14 combat brigades there being rotated out of Iraq without being replaced. Such brigades generally have about 3,500 troops each, the Times said.
A 127,000-strong American force is serving in Iraq more than three years into a war in which about 2,500 U.S. troops have died.
The number of bases in Iraq would also decline as U.S. forces consolidated, the Times said. By the end of the year, the number of bases would shrink to 57 from the current 69, and by June 2007 there would be 30 bases.
By the end of 2007, there would be 11, with the United States having three principal regional military commands: in Baghdad and the surrounding area, in Anbar Province and the west and in northern Iraq.
The withdrawals would depend on continued progress among Iraqi security forces and a drop in Sunni Arab hostility toward the Iraqi government, and assume that the insurgency will not expand beyond Iraq's six central provinces, the Times said.
Casey last year forecast a "fairly substantial" reduction in U.S. troops this spring and summer if Iraq's political process goes well and progress is made in training Iraqi security forces. On Thursday he noted the U.S. force currently is about 12,000 troops below where it was when he last made that prediction in July 2005.
"What this process allows is for General Casey to engage with the new Maliki government so it can go from a notional concept to a practical plan of security implementation over the next two years," the Times quoted a White House official as saying.
Defense Secretary Donald
...
...