Pentagon Signals Sending More Troops To Afghanistan

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LOLITA C. BALDOR | July 16, 2008 11:53 PM EST | AP

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Defense Secretary Robert Gates, left, and Joints Chiefs Chairman Adm. Michael Mullen, take part in news conference at the Pentagon, Wednesday, July 16, 2008. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

WASHINGTON — Pentagon leaders on Wednesday signaled a surge in U.S. forces in Afghanistan "sooner rather than later," a shift that could send some units there within weeks, as officials prepare to cut troop levels in Iraq.

Senior military officials are looking across the services to identify smaller units and other equipment that could be sent to Afghanistan, according to a defense official.

Although there are no brigade-sized units that can be deployed quickly into Afghanistan, military leaders believe they can find a number of smaller units such as aviation, engineering and surveillance troops that can be moved more swiftly, said the official, who requested anonymity because the discussions are private.

The moves are expected to happen within weeks rather than months, the official said.

The decisions are being made against the backdrop of shifting priorities for the U.S. military, and were discussed during a meeting Wednesday of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Military leaders are weighing requests from commanders in Afghanistan for more troops, aircraft and other assistance. And they are trying to determine the right balance between the needs of the force in Iraq, versus troops in Afghanistan who are facing a Taliban resurgence.

To date, the fight in Afghanistan has taken a back seat to Iraq, which has been the strategic priority. While Iraq will remains the top goal, it now appears the military believes there should be a more urgent emphasis on Afghanistan than there has been.

Faced with an increasingly sophisticated insurgency, particularly along Afghanistan's border with Pakistan, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Wednesday that sending more troops would have a significant impact on the violence.

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"I think that we are clearly working very hard to see if there are opportunities to send additional forces sooner rather than later," Gates told Pentagon reporters. But, he added that no final decisions or recommendations have been made.

His comments suggested an acceleration in what had been plans to shift forces there early next year. And they came as the political discourse on Afghanistan as a key military priority escalated on both Capitol Hill and the presidential campaign trail.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who recently returned from meetings with commanders in Afghanistan, said they clearly want more troops now.

"It's a tougher fight, it's a more complex fight, and they need more troops to have the long-term impact that we all want to have there," said Mullen, who also met last week with Pakistani leaders.

The Pentagon has been wrestling with how to provide what they say is a much needed military buildup in Afghanistan, while they still have 150,000 troops in Iraq. Gates and Mullen have repeatedly said they would have to reduce troop levels in Iraq before they could dedicate more forces to Afghanistan.

Mullen, who was in Iraq last week, told reporters that he is likely to recommend further troop reductions there this fall. He said he found that conditions in Iraq had improved more than he expected.

"I won't go so far as to say that progress in Iraq from a military perspective has reached a tipping point or is irreversible _ it has not, and it is not," Mullen told a Pentagon press conference.

"But security is unquestionably and remarkably better. Indeed, if these trends continue I expect to be able early this fall to recommend to the secretary and the president further troop reductions," he said.

The military buildup in Iraq that began more than 18 months ago has ended, now that the last of the five additional combat brigades sent in by President Bush last year has left the country.

Its departure marks the end of what the Pentagon called the "surge." And it starts the 45-day evaluation period that Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, told Congress he would need to assess the security situation and determine how many more troops he could send home.

Neither Gates nor Mullen would detail how they intend to juggle the military requirements in Iraq and Afghanistan, but they spoke more aggressively about meeting Afghan needs more quickly.

Gates said commanders are looking at moving forces around to take advantage of a small boost in French troops expected in Afghanistan. But he ruled out rolling back some of the promises the Pentagon made to soldiers limiting their deployments to 12 months.

"I think we're looking at a variety of options on how to respond here," Gates said. "I will tell you that I have sought assurances that there will be no return to longer-than-12-month deployments, so that's not something we're considering."

Also, he said he is not aware of any plans to extend the deployments of any U.S. troops currently there.

Gates and Mullen also has strong words for Pakistan, saying Islamabad must do a better job preventing Taliban and other insurgents from crossing the border into Afghanistan to wage attacks.

The absence of pressure from the Pakistanis, Gates said, is giving militants a greater opportunity to penetrate the porous mountain border. He said the key is to further convince the Pakistani government that their country is also at great risk from the insurgents.

Gates said it is an exaggeration to say that the border problems have escalated into a war between Pakistan and Afghanistan. And he also dismissed as untrue suggestions that the U.S. is massing troops along the border preparing to launch attacks into Pakistan.

His comments came as U.S. troops abandoned a remote outpost in eastern Afghanistan where militants killed nine of their comrades this week in a large, coordinated attack. Elsewhere in the frontier region, NATO launched artillery and helicopter strikes in Pakistan after coming under insurgent rocket fire, officials said.

There are currently 36,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, including 17,500 with the NATO-led force, and 18,500 who are fighting insurgents and training Afghan forces.

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On the Net:

Defense Department: http://www.defenselink.mil

(This version CORRECTS leader to leaders in first paragraph.)

WASHINGTON — Pentagon leaders on Wednesday signaled a surge in U.S. forces in Afghanistan "sooner rather than later," a shift that could send some units there within weeks, as officials prepare ...
WASHINGTON — Pentagon leaders on Wednesday signaled a surge in U.S. forces in Afghanistan "sooner rather than later," a shift that could send some units there within weeks, as officials prepare ...
Filed by Max Follmer  |  Report Corrections
 
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- unionave I'm a Fan of unionave 61 fans permalink
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The day we stop using petro will be the day we stop the killing .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 AM on 07/17/2008
- PAposter I'm a Fan of PAposter 124 fans permalink
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Let's Go! and then let's get our troops out of the Middle East region.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 AM on 07/17/2008

President Bush and his sycophants in the Pentagon have developed a new military strategy. They have recently activated the 1st , 2nd and 3rd US Army Cardboard Brigades. These Brigades consists of cardboard cutouts of American Soldiers and their equipment. They are flown into wherever they are needed with the plan to scare our adversaries into submission. Huge press coverage of course is required but that will be no problem with our asleep at the switch MSM and Fixed Noise!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:16 AM on 07/17/2008

Seems the best argument for a Obama presidency is Bush doing what Obama is recommending now.

When your opponents become followers even before you become president hat's leadership ... judgement ... intelligence

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 AM on 07/17/2008
- Ohene I'm a Fan of Ohene 3 fans permalink

Isn't that interesting! Bush after 6 years now sees where the real danger lies. What is even puzzling about all this is that the Bush govt. is now implementing some of the major campaign ideas of the Democratic presumptive Nominee Obama. Puzzling, because the McCainists are painting Obama "naïve" whilst the Republican president Bush is increasingly implementing the policy positions of Obama. Yesterday we heard the news that some US officials are going to meet the Iranian nuclear scientists in Geneva. Talking to "enemies" is appeasement – the message of Bush in the Knesset.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 AM on 07/17/2008
- bosshogg I'm a Fan of bosshogg 3 fans permalink
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bush to obama: "obama i still think you are naive but how would you handle the Chinese"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 AM on 07/17/2008

There's really no secret about this. Just drive by Camp Pendleton and you can see the piers being built to move the men and equipment to the ships off shore. Ask anyone in Carlsbad and they'll tell you the orders came down almost two months ago. The military feels that Iraq is manageable and that we've got a bigger problem in Afghanistan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 AM on 07/17/2008
- Gary47 I'm a Fan of Gary47 15 fans permalink

This is a clear demonstration that Obama already is commander in chief.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 AM on 07/17/2008
- RatgurlSD I'm a Fan of RatgurlSD 10 fans permalink

You mean to say they're sending more troops into AFGHANISTAN? Where the REAL war is?

I guess better late than never.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 07/17/2008
- GBartrem I'm a Fan of GBartrem 3 fans permalink
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Well it's about damn time someone in that gawd awful whitehouse­.... thought up a grand idea like that. concidering that the Taliban and Al Qaeda are in that region. You would think that there are some thankful commanders over there in Afganistan right now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 AM on 07/17/2008
- EDHvoice I'm a Fan of EDHvoice 2 fans permalink

It is about time to take this action in Afghanistan. I perhaps 8 brigades is even better than the 5 brigades proposed. The problem is that Mr. Bush's terrible decision making has made 8 brigades an impossibility.

Mr. Bush made a strategic error in 2003 when he chose to cut and run in Afghanistan so that he could launch a war of aggression in Iraq. He should have stayed the course in Afghanistan. He had world support against al quida and a mandate to rebuild Afghanistan into a 21st century country. Instead, he squandered world opinion, squandered our national defense and wasted an opportunity to bring peace and stability to a country in the heart of Southwest Asia.

Now we must go back and fix the problem in Afghanistan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 07/16/2008
- darthdarcy I'm a Fan of darthdarcy 48 fans permalink
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We don't have The Troops to send to Afghanistan , which is a bad thing all the way around but also for the most part the Troops we can send are beat over stressed and Afghanistan is a place of often heavy intense fighting while heavily outnumber and or constant harassment attacks to keep those in our outposts under pressure..­.

Bush has so severely weakened our nations military..­.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 PM on 07/16/2008
- shel3364 I'm a Fan of shel3364 33 fans permalink

Wow, I could swear someone has been saying we should do this.... who was that man???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 PM on 07/16/2008
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 133 fans permalink
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Considering its been reported that the Taliban has rebuilt and even increased in size many time by other media outlets around the world. ( excluding us controlled media) and the fact that Bush has had the Gitmo replacement built in Afghanistan, so they will surely try to keep everyone away so there will be no embarrassing moments like with Abu Grey and Gitmo, I am not surprised they will be increasing troops there. I have a feeling Afghanistan will be so secret and secured now North Korea will be very jealous.
Out of control of US justice system. Out of view of media and the public. How does that saying go?? Out of sight, out of mind.... I doubt this has anything to do with Al Qaeda , except that we will be told they are the reason why. We dont toss billions of US money , borrowed from China, into Afghanistan and Pakistan for nothing. I am sure its the next largest launder of funneled tax money for corporations and other friends of PNAC around the world next to Iraq. Im also sure a select few in Pakistan and Afghanistan have been paid dearly to keep Al Qaeda safe and strong too. Its the best way the the PNAC world domination by death and destruction going. For without AL Qaeda, who would we have for an invisible enemy to fight in an endless war?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 07/16/2008
- RatgurlSD I'm a Fan of RatgurlSD 10 fans permalink

I really don't mean to sound snarky, but were your parents related?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 AM on 07/17/2008

Good one, Ratgurl.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 AM on 07/17/2008
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