Posted on 07/08/2005 5:01:27 PM PDT by SandRat
WASHINGTON, July 8, 2005 Iraqi security forces in and around Baghdad are making progress in their training and will be ready to assume responsibility for security measures for the October elections, the area's top U.S. commander said today. Speaking by satellite from Baghdad in a Pentagon news briefing, Army Maj. Gen. William Webster, commander of Task Force Baghdad and the 3rd Infantry Division, said two Iraqi brigades already are operating on their own in Baghdad, and two more will be operational in about two months. The remaining two brigades that will make up the Iraqi army division in Baghdad will be ready by the elections, he added.
The plan is for the Iraqi division, made up of six brigades, along with Iraqi special police and commandos, to plan and conduct security for the elections in Baghdad, with backup from U.S. forces, he said. Iraqi forces are facing difficulties in supporting themselves logistically for long-term operations, he explained, and it will be at least spring before they are fully independent in that capacity.
Iraqi and coalition forces have been successful at reducing the number of vehicle-borne improvised explosive device attacks in Baghdad, largely due to an increased presence of Iraqi forces, Webster said.
"We attribute our success to better trained and experienced Iraqi security forces patrolling the streets, talking to the Iraqi people and gathering greater intelligence," he said. "The people are gaining more confidence, and they're providing them lots of information."
Since the beginning of Operation Lightning in May, the number of vehicle-borne IED attacks per week in Baghdad has been cut in half, thousands of suspects have been captured, including 51 foreign fighters, and more than 2,500 traffic-control points have been established, the general said. The insurgency in Baghdad has been suppressed to a point where political and economic progress can continue, and despite continued threats, the terrorists will not maintain a large presence there, he said.
"We don't think the enemy is capable of sustained, long-term operations against us and the Iraqi security forces," he said.
Defeat of the insurgency, however, is a more ambiguous concept, Webster said. The insurgents are highly adaptable enemies who are hard to keep track of, he explained.
"It's very difficult to know it's over until the Iraqi people are comfortable with the level of security that they have around them and they're able to go on with their lives in a normal way," he said.
Iraqi and coalition forces are continually improving in their tactics against insurgents, he said, and the strength of the government and confidence of the Iraqi people prove there is hope for the future of Iraq.
IRAQ Progress Ping
The Iraqi forces are a volunteer force, There is no shortage of recruits. Many no longer fight just for money but to revenge the deaths of their friends and relatives. Furthermore, 2 years of fighting has created seasoned officers and veterans. The Iraqi forces no longer run when attacked by insurgents. Add the fact that the Sunnis are planning to participate in the elections and are attacking the foreign fighters greatly underminds Zarqawi's efforts. By Jan 2005 the Iraqi Army will increase from 160 000 to 240 000 men. Hopefully it means we can downsize our forces before the 2006 US elections giving GWB/GOP a boost in the polls. Latest intercepts of messages from OBL to Zarqawi is to pull all his fighters out of Iraq signaling that AQ had concluded that the Battle for Iraq is all but over. Question is where is the AQ fighters going to set up? In the meantime watch what the US does in the post insurgent Iraq. You will see the Iraqi army increase to 600 000 men and heavy weapons being reintroduced, Syria and Iran will start sweating. The end of the Battle of Iraq is just the beginning rounds to the US war in the Middle East against nations that historically supported terrorism.
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