12,000 More Troops Headed to Iraq
Sunday, December 5, 2004 at 03:15AM
TheSpook
The Pentagon announced yesterday that
the American military presence in Iraq "will grow by nearly 12,000
troops by next month, to 150,000, the highest level since the invasion
last year." The increase primarily will be achieved by ordering about
10,400 soldiers and marines already in Iraq to extend their tours of
duty, even as their replacements arrive. In some cases, this will be
the second extension of service for the soldiers; many soldiers now
will be in Iraq for 14 months, longer than "the year-long mission most
service members are told to expect." The Washington Post points
out that "adding troops at this point is the opposite of what senior
Pentagon officials expected when the war began in March 2003." The
original plan, predicated on the wishful thinking that U.S. troops
would be greeted as liberators, called for troop levels to be as
low as 50,000 by the end of 2003. American Progress's Larry Korb,
assistant secretary of defense for manpower in the Reagan
administration, "said the tour extensions could come back to haunt the
Army when soldiers in the affected units have to decide whether to
re-enlist. 'This is the worst way to do it [increase the force],
because by not putting enough troops in there and extending the people
who are already there, you really demoralize people, particularly
around the holidays,' Mr. Korb said." The extensions show "the
Army's too small and you didn't put enough troops in there in the first
place," he added. [more] and [more]
- Pictured above: The
casket of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Dimitrios Gavriel is lowered into a
grave by a Marine honor guard at Arlington National Cemetery near
Washington DC, December 2, 2004. The U.S. Marine Corps said on Thursday
it will again disclose the deaths of Marines as they occur in Iraq
reversing a policy that has made it difficult to track American
casualties and the lethality of the insurgency
- U.S. troops include plenty of gray heads [more]
- Iraq's civilian dead get no hearing in the United States [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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