Brian Doherty | July 28, 2006
More troops will probably be in Iraq at the end of the year then there are now, AP reports, as an extra 5,000 are sent in to Baghdad to quell escalating violence there:
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.
Back in 2003, our own Tim Cavanaugh discussed stop-loss, one of the military's techniques for keeping its numbers robust. The military does insist that it will be meeting its recruitment goals this year--sounds like they'll definitely need it.
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Not much observation of the Iraq war is required to see that the
insurgency is using Bush's unwillingness to send alot more troops
to their advantage.
By working on one area, they force us to withdraw troops from other
areas to deal with it. When we do that, they move to attack the
areas we made weaker by the troop movement. Watch, in a month they
will start hitting areas where we moved troops. That cycle has been
going on since the first year.
There can be little doubt that the insurgency is in control of the
tempo.
The military equivalent of taking a shot of herion to quell your
withdrawal pains.
The difference being, George Bush knows that he will get to pass
his addiction off to someone else in two and a half years.
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