Military commanders in Iraq are developing a plan to move as many as 5,000
U.S. troops with armored vehicles and tanks into Baghdad in an effort to quell
escalating violence, defense officials said Thursday.
US Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld, seen here on 12 July 2006. The Pentagon extended the
tours of about 3,500 US troops in Iraq for 120 days in a move that dashed
hopes of a reduction in the US force this year in the face of surging
sectarian violence.[AFP] |
As part of the plan, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on Thursday
extended the tours of some 3,500 members of the 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat
Team. The unit, which has been serving in northern Iraq, was scheduled to be
leaving now, but instead, most of its 3,900 troops will serve for up to four
more months. It was unclear whether the unit would go to Baghdad.
Under the plan to bolster security in Baghdad, U.S. troops would be teamed
with Iraqi police and army units and make virtually every operation in the city
a joint effort, one military official said. Another said movement of some troops
into Baghdad had already begun.
At the same time, the Pentagon signaled plans to maintain or possibly
increase the current level of about 130,000 troops in Iraq, by announcing that
roughly 21,000 Army soldiers and Marines have been told they are scheduled to go
to Iraq during the current 2006-2008 rotation.
Combined with two previous announcements of about 113,000 U.S. service
members scheduled for the rotation period, this could bring the number of U.S.
troops there to 134,000, if all are deployed.
Military commanders have said deployments depend on conditions in Iraq. But
the latest announcement calls into question whether the Pentagon could
significantly reduce troop levels in Iraq by year's end as commanders had hoped.
As part of the Baghdad security plan, all flights out for soldiers currently
at the end of their deployment were canceled as of Tuesday, as commanders
wrestled how to supply troops for the effort, a third official said.
All spoke on condition of anonymity because the plan had not been finalized.
Rumsfeld, meanwhile, met privately with lawmakers on Capitol Hill throughout
the day Thursday to discuss funding needed for troops and the replacement or
repair of equipment damaged in combat. House and Senate Republicans are weighing
next year's defense spending bills amid reports that Army units are woefully
ill-equipped and need billions of dollars to recover from the war.
"There is no question that resetting the force after the heavy usage that's
occurred costs money and will have to be funded in supplementals for a period of
time," said Rumsfeld, who predicted that funds may be needed for up to three
years after the war ends.
President Bush broadly outlined a plan to increase U.S. and Iraqi forces in
Baghdad during Tuesday's visit to Washington by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki. But little detail was provided.
Officials said it would involve shifting some U.S. forces to the capital from
other locations in the country. There were about 30,000 U.S. troops in Baghdad
prior to the new plan.
Assembling more troops and armor in Baghdad is aimed at calming violence that
has only increased in the capital since mid-June, when al-Maliki launched a
broad security crackdown.
The plan includes moving about four companies of military police, or about
400 soldiers, to Baghdad, along with the remainder of a reserve force that had
been in Kuwait, equaling about another 400 troops.
Defense experts inside and outside the Pentagon have said that that diverting
U.S. troops to Baghdad could weaken their ability in other parts of the country.
And they say the plan reverses an earlier effort to make Americans less visible
and put Iraqi forces out front in the fight.
Others argued that Baghdad is the central problem at the moment and that
Iraqis in the capital will feel safer with the heavier armored presence.
"There is definitely a fine line between overwhelming amounts of combat power
versus enough to make you feel safe," said one of the military officials. "I
don't think we're talking a tank on every street corner."
While about 3,500 members of the Stryker brigade were still in Iraq Thursday,
about 200 had returned to Alaska and some 200 others were in Kuwait awaiting
transportation home.
The Army said officials will determine on a case-by-case basis whether any of
those in Alaska or Kuwait need to return to Iraq. It is likely the majority of
those in Alaska will be able to stay there, but those who are determined to be
essential personnel may have to return to the battlefront.
Rumsfeld has extended tours of duty before in the war, including several
times last fall when U.S. forces were increased to deal with violence at the
time of the Iraqi elections.
The units now scheduled to deploy to Iraq, according to Thursday's
announcement, are the 1st Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division based at Fort Hood in
Texas; the 4th Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division based at Fort Bliss in Texas; and
Marine Regimental Combat Teams 2 and 6, both based at Camp Lejeune in North
Carolina. Also, the 1st Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division based at Fort Stewart in
Georgia has been told it should be prepared to deploy later this
year.