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This article originally provided by
Yahoo
December 6, 2006
Panel: Bush's Iraq policies have failed
By ANNE PLUMMER FLAHERTY and DAVID ESPO,
Associated Press Writers
President Bush's war policies have failed in almost every
regard, the bipartisan Iraq Study Group concluded Wednesday,
and it warned of dwindling chances to change course before
crisis turns to chaos with dire implications for terrorism,
war in the Middle East and higher oil prices around the
world.
Nearly four years, $400 billion and more than 2,900 U.S.
deaths into a deeply unpopular war, violence is bad and
getting worse, there is no guarantee of success and the
consequences of failure are great, the high-level panel of
five Republicans and five Democrats said in a bleak
accounting of U.S. and Iraqi shortcomings.
It said the United States should find ways to pull back
most of its combat forces by early 2008 and focus U.S.
troops on training and supporting Iraqi units. The U.S.
should also begin a "diplomatic offensive" by the end of the
month and engage adversaries Iran and Syria in an effort to
quell sectarian violence and shore up the fragile Iraqi
government, the report said.
It followed by a day the sobering appraisal of Robert
Gates, who was confirmed Wednesday as Bush's new Pentagon
chief, that the United States is not winning in Iraq.
"Despite a massive effort, stability in Iraq remains
elusive and the situation is deteriorating," the independent
report said. "The ability of the United States to shape
outcomes is diminishing. Time is running out."
The group's recommendations do not endorse either the
current White House strategy of staying put in Iraq or calls
from Bush's political opponents for a quick pullout or a
firm timetable for withdrawal.
"The report is an acknowledgment that there will be no
military solution in Iraq. It will require a political
solution arrived at through sustained Iraqi and region-wide
diplomacy and engagement," said Sen. Chuck Hagel (news, bio,
voting record), R-Neb.
Incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other
Democrats said the ball is in Bush's court.
"If the president is serious about the need for change in
Iraq, he will find Democrats ready to work with him in a
bipartisan fashion to find a way to end the war as quickly
as possible," Pelosi said.
The Iraq panel's leaders said they tried to avoid
politically charged language such as "victory," on the one
hand or "civil war" on the other, but the words they chose
were still powerful. The report says the current strategy is
not working and lays out example after example where it has
come up short.
As if to underscore that the conflict is hurtling out of
control, the military reported that 10 American troops were
killed Wednesday, adding to the toll of U.S. forces who have
died since the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in early
2003. The United States has about 140,000 troops in the
country.
"We do not recommend a stay-the-course solution," said
James A. Baker III, the former secretary of state and Bush
family adviser who co-chaired the commission. "In our
opinion, that approach is no longer viable."
Former Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., the other co-chairman,
said the commission agreed with Bush's goal of an Iraq able
to govern, protect and sustain itself but that the
administration needed new approaches.
"No course of action in Iraq is guaranteed to stop a
slide toward chaos," Hamilton said. "Yet, in our view, not
all options have been exhausted."
The report has been widely seen as an opportunity for
Bush to pivot from policies blamed in large part for
Republican losses in midterm elections last month. Bush
praised the group's work, but gave no hint of his next move.
He said he would give the findings a hard look and urged
Congress to do the same.
"This report gives a very tough assessment of the
situation in Iraq," Bush said after an early morning
briefing from the group of five Republican and five
Democratic former government officials and advisers. "It is
a report that brings some really very interesting proposals,
and we will take every proposal seriously and we will act in
a timely fashion."
Bush met later with members of Congress from both
political parties and said he wanted to cooperate to "send a
message to the American people that the struggle for
freedom, the struggle for our security is not the purview of
one party over the other."
The commission also briefed members of the Iraqi
government by teleconference, and one official there agreed
that Iraqis must take responsibility for their own security.
"Absolute dependence on foreign troops is not possible,"
said Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh.
Among its 79 recommendations, the group said the United
States should reduce political, military or economic support
for Iraq if the government in Baghdad cannot make
substantial progress. The report said Iraqi leaders have
failed to deliver better security or political compromises
that would reduce violence, and it implied that a four-month
joint U.S.-Iraqi military campaign to reduce violence in
Baghdad is hopeless.
"Because none of the operations conducted by U.S. and
Iraqi military forces are fundamentally changing the
conditions encouraging the sectarian violence, U.S. forces
seem to be caught in a mission that has no foreseeable end,"
the report said.
That was a withering evaluation of a central tenet of the
Bush military strategy in Iraq. In Baghdad and elsewhere,
U.S. forces are supposed to help Iraqi units "clear, hold
and build," shorthand for routing insurgents or other
fighters from problem areas, securing those areas from
further violence and setting a positive future course.
On the highly emotional issue of troop withdrawals, the
commission warned against either a precipitous pullback or
an open-ended commitment to a large deployment.
"Military priorities must change," the report said,
toward a goal of training, equipping and advising Iraqi
forces.
The report said Bush should put aside misgivings and
engage Syria, Iran and the leaders of insurgent forces in
negotiations on Iraq's future, to begin by year's end. It
urged him to revive efforts at a broader Middle East peace.
The report laid out consequences from bad to worse,
including the threat of wider war in the Middle East and
reduced oil production that would hurt the global economy.
In a slap at the Pentagon, the commission said there is
significant underreporting of the actual level of violence
in Iraq. It also faulted the U.S. intelligence effort,
saying the government "still does not understand very well
either the insurgency in Iraq or the role of the militias."
The commission recommended the number of U.S. troops
embedded to train Iraqis should increase dramatically, from
3,000 to 4,000 currently to 10,000 to 20,000. Commission
member William Perry, defense secretary in the Clinton
administration, said those could be drawn from combat
brigades already in Iraq.
The report noted that Iraq costs run about $8 billion a
month and that the bills will keep coming. "Caring for
veterans and replacing lost equipment will run into the
hundreds of billions of dollars," the commission said.
"Estimates run as high as $2 trillion for the final cost of
the U.S. involvement in Iraq."
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On the Net:
The Iraq Study Group report is available at:
http://wid.ap.org/documents/iraq/2006isg_report.pdf
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