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Gates Open to Increasing End-strength if Forces Deployed Correctly
American Forces Press Service ^
| Jim Garamone
Posted on 12/05/2006 3:54:03 PM PST by SandRat
WASHINGTON, Dec. 5, 2006 -- Robert M. Gates vowed today to be an independent voice if he is confirmed as defense secretary.
I dont owe anybody anything, Gates said in testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee. Ive come back here to do the best I can for the men and women in uniform and for the country in terms of these difficult problems that we face.
Gates, who was nominated for the top DoD post by President Bush, also said he is open to increasing the end-strength of the Army and Marine Corps.
Gates said he thinks the United States is not winning in Iraq, but he said the United States is going to have to have a presence in Iraq for some time. Iraqi forces have no logistical capabilities or air power of their own, he said.
Regardless of strategy changes, he said, clearly we are still going to have to have some form of American support for a number of years, but it could be with a dramatically smaller number of U.S. forces than we have today.
Gates said the United States is willing to continue to help the Iraqis as long as they want our help. But this does not imply that the U.S. military will be in Iraq at the same levels needed to handle major combat operations, he added.
He said he agrees with President Bushs goal for Iraq: a country that can defend, sustain and govern itself. Gates said the president believes there needs to be a change in our approach in Iraq, that what we are doing now is not working satisfactorily.
Gates said Bush told him he wanted someone with fresh eyes to look at the situation in Iraq and make recommendations. In my view, all options are on the table in how we address the problems in Iraq in terms of how we can be more successful and how we can, at some point, begin to draw down our forces, Gates said. The bottom line is that I believe he wants me to take a fresh look and all options are on the table.
Gates also said there were clearly insufficient troops in Iraq after the initial invasion to establish control over the country. But, if the Senate confirms him, he is very open to the possibility of and the necessity of an increase in the end-strength of the Army.
Gates noted there are 150,000 troops engaged in operations in Iraq and Afghanistan today. But the Army has 500,000 active-duty soldiers and another 500,000 reserve-component forces. He said he would like to see how the rest of the rest of the Army -- those not engaged in Iraq or Afghanistan -- is being used to ensure that all forces are used in the best way.
If the answer is those troops are deployed in the way we want them deployed, then I am very open to the idea of increasing the end-strength, he said.
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TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: forces; frwn; gates; increasing; size
1
posted on
12/05/2006 3:54:05 PM PST
by
SandRat
To: 91B; HiJinx; Spiff; MJY1288; xzins; Calpernia; clintonh8r; TEXOKIE; windchime; Grampa Dave; ...
FR WAR NEWS!
WAR News You'll Hear Nowhere Else!
All the News the MSM refuses to use!
2
posted on
12/05/2006 3:54:38 PM PST
by
SandRat
(Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
To: SandRat
" Gates said Bush told him he wanted someone with fresh eyes to look at the situation in Iraq " In that case, look for someone who has the optic nerves attached. Fresh eyes aren't worth a damn if the curtain is closed.
To: Nathan Zachary
Notice the cut and runners are being really quiet lately.
4
posted on
12/05/2006 4:03:06 PM PST
by
bybybill
(`IF TH E RATS WIN, WE LOSE)
To: SandRat
The Howard Dean wing of the Democrat Party will be furious. They believe their victory last month means surrender was imminent. If the Wicked Witch of the West doesn't push for impeachment they will be apoplectic. Just raising the minimum wage isn't going to appease the Deaniac insurgents.
5
posted on
12/05/2006 5:19:04 PM PST
by
Dilbert56
To: SandRat
I dont owe anybody anything,...."I might be a little skeptical about that remark.
6
posted on
12/05/2006 5:30:15 PM PST
by
FlyVet
To: SandRat
One fact remains. Gates is a lifelong spook. Spooks and military just don't get along. They speak a different language and have different priorities.
This means that if Gates tries some antics like Jimmy Carter's draft-dodging Harold Brown, the Pentagon will just neuter him.
It doesn't matter what any President thinks or wants. You either get along with the Pentagon, or at least a big part of the Pentagon, or you are "little people."
To: SandRat
Gates also said there were clearly insufficient troops in Iraq after the initial invasion to establish control over the country. But, if the Senate confirms him, he is very open to the possibility of and the necessity of an increase in the end-strength of the Army....Bush and Rumsfeld have said consistently that they have set the level of troops in Iraq based on what the commanders in the field requested - I heard no one ask Gates the big question - if he ends up believing more boots are needed on the ground over there, will he overrule his own generals and force them to integrate added forces? (and what will he say when lefties all over the world start protesting that we are trying to "occupy" the country with more troops?)......
To: Popocatapetl
. Spooks and military just don't get along. CIA spooks and the military don't get along, but Military Spooks get along with other military as well as other "communities" within the military, which might be to say they are tolerated.
Captain El Gato, USAFR(ret)
and former member of the USAF Intelligence Reserve. (Did less honest work on active duty. :))
9
posted on
12/05/2006 11:23:39 PM PST
by
El Gato
To: El Gato
Military spooks are "of the people". But the best that you can hope for with Company men is an entente.
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