The Sunni Arab heart of the Iraqi insurgency seems likely to hold its 
strength the rest of the year, and some of its leaders are now collaborating 
with al-Qaida terrorists, the Pentagon said Tuesday. 
 
 
 |  President Bush, right, 
 shakes hands as he participates in a Credentials Ceremony for the 
 Ambassador of Iraq to the United States, Samir Sumaidaie, left, in the 
 Oval Office of the White House, Tuesday, May 30, 2006 in Washington. 
 [AP]
 | 
In a report assessing the situation in Iraq, required quarterly by Congress, 
the Pentagon painted a mixed picture on a day when the U.S. military command in 
Baghdad said 1,500 more combat troops have arrived in the country. The extra 
troops are part of an intensified effort to wrest control of the provincial 
capital of Ramadi from insurgents. 
The report to Congress offered a relatively dim picture of economic progress, 
with few gains in improving basic services like electricity, and it provided no 
promises of U.S. troop reductions anytime soon. 
On the other hand, it said the Iraqi army is gaining strength and taking lead 
responsibility for security in more areas. 
The U.S. government has struggled for three years to understand the shadowy 
insurgency in Iraq, which began in the Sunni Triangle west and north of Baghdad. 
In Tuesday's report, the Pentagon said the "rejectionists" who are a key element 
of the insurgency are holding their own against U.S. and Iraqi forces. 
"MNF-I expects that rejectionist strength will likely remain steady 
throughout 2006, but that their appeal and motivation for continued violent 
action will begin to wane in early 2007," the report said. The term MNF-I refers 
to the Multinational Force-Iraq, the top American military command in Baghdad. 
It also said for the first time that the Sunnis who reject the U.S.-based 
government are collaborating with al-Qaida. 
"Some hardline Sunni rejectionists have joined al-Qaida in Iraq in recent 
months, increasing the terrorists' attack options," the report said. 
It said a separate element of the insurgency that U.S. officials describe as 
former loyalists of the Saddam Hussein regime remains an important enabler of 
the violence in Iraq. But the Saddam loyalists have "mostly splintered" into 
other groups. As a result, they are now "largely irrelevant" as a threat to the 
fledgling Iraqi government, said Lt. Gen. Victor E. Renuart, the head of 
strategic plans and policy for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who helped prepare the 
report. 
The report also said that while security in much of Iraq has improved, total 
attacks against U.S. and Iraqi forces have increased in recent months, following 
the Feb. 22 bombing of the Golden Mosque in Samarra. 
President Bush said he remained hopeful that the new Iraqi government will 
succeed in stabilizing the country. 
"Although there's been some very difficult times for the Iraqi people, I'm 
impressed by the courage of the leadership, impressed by the determination of 
the people," Bush said Tuesday in the Oval Office during the credentialing 
ceremony for Samir Sumaidaie, Iraq's ambassador to the United States. 
The troop move announced Tuesday involves about 1,500 soldiers from an 
armored brigade on standby in Kuwait and reflects a deteriorating security 
situation in the volatile provincial capital of Ramadi. It raises the number of 
U.S. military brigades in Iraq from 15 to 16, just five months after the number 
was cut from 17 to 15. A brigade has at least 3,500 troops. 
The administration is under election-year pressure to demonstrate concrete 
progress in Iraq and to begin reducing U.S. troop levels at a time when the Army 
and Marines in particular are stretched thin by war deployments. 
Anthony Cordesman, an Iraq watcher with the Center for Strategic and 
International Studies, said Tuesday there is no clear basis for believing U.S. 
troop levels can be reduced anytime soon without risking further deterioration 
in the security situation. He said the best measure of progress is not the 
number of U.S. troops in Iraq but the degree to which their role in 
counterinsurgency operations is assumed by Iraqis. 
"I think, in honesty, that now looks a lot more like 2007 at the earliest 
(for) really having serious reductions in the U.S. combat role (and) being 
certain that the U.S. casualty levels are going down on a lasting basis and 
being able to reduce the costs of the war," Cordesman said in a telephone 
interview. 
Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said there are 130,000 U.S. troops in Iraq. 
It was not clear whether that included the 1,500 soldiers from two battalions of 
the 2nd brigade of the 1st Armored Division whose deployment to the Ramadi area 
was described as "short term" in a U.S. military statement from Baghdad. 
A defense official said the two battalions were expected to be in Anbar for a 
maximum of four months, operating as part of a Marine force. The official was 
not authorized to discuss such details and so spoke on condition of anonymity. 
A third battalion from the brigade in Kuwait was sent to Baghdad in March as 
part of a broader plan to improve security in the capital during the formation 
of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's new cabinet. That cabinet was announced and 
put in place more than a week ago but still lacks ministers of defense and 
interior, who control the Iraqi army and police. Whitman said that battalion is 
still operating in the Baghdad area.