Posted by
ThomasDFaw on Sunday, November 16, 2008 2:46:55 AM
The U.S. military in Iraq is abandoning - deliberately and
with little public notice - a centerpiece of the widely acclaimed
strategy it adopted nearly two years ago to turn the tide against the
insurgency. It is moving American troops farther from the people they
are trying to protect.
Starting
in early 2007, with Iraq on the brink of all-out civil war, the troops
were pushed into the cities and villages as part of a change in
strategy that included President Bush's decision to send more combat
forces.
The bigger U.S. presence on the streets was
credited by many with allowing the Americans and their Iraqi security
partners to build trust among the populace, thus undermining the
extremists' tactics of intimidation, reducing levels of violence and
giving new hope to resolving the country's underlying political
conflicts.
Now the Americans are reversing direction,
consolidating in larger bases outside the cities and leaving security
in the hands of the Iraqis while remaining within reach to respond as
the Iraqi forces require.
The U.S. is on track to
complete its shift out of all Iraqi cities by June 2009. That is one of
the milestones in a political-military campaign plan devised in 2007 by
Gen. David Petraeus, when he was the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and
his political partner in Baghdad, Ambassador Ryan Crocker. The goal
also is in a preliminary security pact with the Iraqi government on the
future U.S. military presence.
The shift is not
explicitly linked to U.S. plans for increasing its military presence in
Afghanistan, but there is an important connection: The logistical
resources needed to house and supply a larger and more distributed U.S.
force in Afghanistan have been tied up in Iraq. To some extent that
will be relieved with the consolidation of U.S. forces in Iraq onto
larger, outlying bases that are easier to
maintain.
These moves coincide with priorities
expressed by President-elect Obama during his campaign: reducing the
U.S. military commitment in Iraq and putting more resources into
Afghanistan. It also fits with Petraeus' view that a more robust
counterinsurgency approach is needed in Afghanistan, meaning not only a
larger number of troops but also getting them spread out into more
villages.
But it also points up a major gamble in
Iraq - namely, that the Iraqis are ready to handle the insurgency
themselves.
Stephen Biddle, a senior fellow for
defense policy at the Council on Foreign Relations and an occasional
adviser to Petraeus, is among those who worry about the consequences of
excluding U.S. forces from the cities.
"It gets us
out of the way" should Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki decide to use
Iraqi security forces to crush the U.S.-allied Sunni neighborhood
militia groups who have been instrumental in attacking extremist
elements of the insurgency, Biddle said in an e-mail exchange.
Al-Maliki sees those militiamen, whom the U.S. has dubbed "Sons of
Iraq," as an internal threat to Shiite political
predominance.
Biddle said that on balance he believes
the risks are more likely to outweigh the benefits of sticking to the
June goal.
Retired Army Col. Peter Mansoor, who
served as Petraeus' right-hand man in Baghdad during the U.S. troop
buildup and has written a book, "Baghdad at Sunrise," about the
counterinsurgency effort, also has misgivings. He said in an e-mail
exchange Tuesday that his main concern is sectarian
violence.
"Without U.S. forces in the cities, the
Shiite and Sunni militias could once again take to fighting each other
without an honest broker to keep the peace," he said. "The Iraqi army
is not ready to play this role, in my view - not yet,
anyway."
Ready or not, U.S. commanders are marching
steadily in that direction - and not just in
Baghdad.
Brig. Gen. Martin Post, deputy commander of
U.S. forces in western Iraq, where the Sunni insurgency has sharply
abated - if not almost disappeared - since 2007, said Monday his outfit
is shutting down the U.S. base at Fallujah. The U.S. headquarters
elements there are moving to al-Asad air base, a large but remote
facility in the vast desert halfway between Fallujah and the Syrian
border.
"There's been a big effort to move all the
Marine forces out of the cities," Post said in a videoconference with
reporters at the Pentagon. "And so as you go throughout, from Fallujah
all the way up the Euphrates River Valley, up to al-Qaim - where we
used to have Marines actually living in the cities - we've pulled them
all out."