US may send 30,000 troops to Iraq: WP

Published November 22, 2006

WASHINGTON, Nov 21: Debate over US options in Iraq intensified on Monday with the military reportedly inclined to temporarily increase US forces by up to 30,000 troops while expanding training and advisory work for Iraqi forces.

US President George Bush said no decision had been made on the matter, but the Washington Post reported that three basic options have emerged in a strategy review in the Pentagon, with the one gaining favour a hybrid that would beef up US forces for a short period to tamp down sectarian violence.“I haven't made any decisions about troop increases or troop decreases, and won't until I hear from a variety of sources,” Mr Bush said in Indonesia.

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman would not comment specifically on the Post story, but said it would be `premature’ to second-guess the outcome of a series of strategy reviews now underway in Washington.

“The fact of the matter is the United States military does have the ability to put more forces on the ground if we need to put more forces on the ground,” he said.

“We've always said the size of the US presence as well as the coalition presence will be based on conditions on the ground and by the recommendations of the commanders in the field,” he said.

But two key lawmakers, one Democrat and one Republican, both argued against any increase, stressing the need to let Iraqis assume more of the security burden.

Gen John Abizaid, the US commander in Iraq, said last week that a 20,000-troop increase in the 144,000-member US force would have a temporary effect on the violence.

But he said the pool of available combat troops in the US Army and the Marine Corps was not large enough to sustain such an increase.

The Post, which cited unidentified senior defence officials, said the secret Joint Staff review offers three basic options -- `Go Big’, `Go Long’ and `Go Home’. The `Go Big’ option calls for a classic counter-insurgency operation that would involve several hundred thousand additional US troops as well as heavily armed Iraqi police, the newspaper said.

That option has been all but rejected by the study group, which concluded that there are not enough troops in the US military and too few effective Iraqi forces, The Post said.

The `Go Home’ option was rejected by the Pentagon group as likely to push Iraq directly into a full-blown civil war, according to the report.

The `Go Long’ option calls for shrinking the US force in Iraq, replacing the current combat force with an extensive programme of military advising and training for Iraqi security forces that would last for years, it said.

The Post said the military is leaning toward a combination of `Go Long’ and `Go Big’, surging US force levels by 20,000 to 30,000 troops for a short period while the training program is being expanded.

Once the transition has been made, US force levels in Iraq would drop to about 60,000, according to the Post.

The temporary increase in force levels is intended to signal to Iraqis that the shift in posture is not a disguised withdrawal, the Post said.—AFP

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