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No pullout timeframe from Iraq: Abizaid
WASHINGTON—The top U.S. commander in the Middle East warned Congress
Wednesday against setting a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops
from Iraq, putting him at odds with resurgent Democrats pressing
President Bush to start pulling out of the violence-torn country.
Gen. John Abizaid spoke as the Senate Armed Services Committee began
re-examining U.S. policy in the wake of last week’s elections, which
gave Democrats control of Congress starting next year and was widely
seen as a repudiation of the administration’s war policies.
Democrats have been coalescing around a call for beginning a U.S.
withdrawal in coming months. In arguing against a timetable for troop
withdrawals, Abizaid told the committee that he and other commanders
need flexibility in managing U.S. forces and determining how and when to
pass on responsibility to Iraqi forces.
“Specific timetables limit that flexibility,” Abizaid said. Asked
directly what effect he foresaw on sectarian violence if Congress
legislated a phased U.S. withdrawal starting in four to six months,
Abizaid replied, “I believe it would increase.”
“It seems to me that the prudent course ahead is to keep the troop
levels about where they are,” Abizaid said, while placing larger teams
of U.S. military advisers inside Iraqi army and police units. He said
that increased emphasis on advising Iraqi units might be accomplished
without significantly increasing the total U.S. force in the country.
With voters expressing overwhelming opposition to the war, Bush the day
after the election expressed a willingness to consider fresh approaches
to Iraq policy and announced the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld, who had become a symbol of the unpopular war.
Abizaid said he believes U.S. troop levels, now at about 141,000, should
stay steady but may have to rise temporarily to train and advise Iraqi
military units. No reductions are advisable until the Iraqi security
forces become more capable of dealing with the insurgency, securing
Baghdad and dealing with the Shiite militia problem, he said. “Our troop
posture needs to stay where it is,” for the time being, he said.
In one of the day’s most contentious clashes, Sen. John McCain (news,
bio, voting record), R-Ariz., challenged Abizaid on his analysis of the
situation and complained that he was advocating no major changes in U.S.
policy. McCain, a possible 2008 presidential candidate, has called for
adding thousands more U.S. combat troops in Iraq to help fight the
insurgency and halt sectarian violence in Baghdad.
“I’m of course disappointed that basically you’re advocating the status
quo here today, which I think the American people in the last election
said that is not an acceptable condition,” McCain said.
In response, Abizaid said he was not arguing for the status quo. He said
the key change that is needed now is to place more U.S. troops inside
the Iraqi army and police units to train and advise these forces in
planning and executing missions.
Pressed by Sen. Jack Reed (news, bio, voting record), D-R.I., on how
much time the U.S. and Iraqi government have to reduce the violence in
Baghdad before it spirals beyond control, Abizaid said, “Four to six
months.”
Developing a “capable, independent” Iraqi government and armed forces
“will set the conditions for withdrawal” of U.S. forces, Abazaid
said.—Agencies |