Posted on 12/23/2006 7:34:08 PM PST by MadIvan
THE White House is expected to announce a reconstruction package for Iraq as part of a plan for a surge of up to 30,000 troops into Baghdad when President George W Bush unveils Americas new strategy next month.
Bush is being urged to give up to $10 billion (£5.1 billion) to Iraq as part of a New Deal that would create work for unemployed Iraqis, following the model of President Franklin D Roosevelt during the 1930s depression.
At the Pentagon, the joint chiefs of staff are insisting on reconstruction funds as part of a package of political and economic measures to accompany the armed forces. They fear the extra troops will be wasted and more lives lost if Bush relies purely on the military to pacify Iraq, according to sources close to General Peter Schoomaker, the army chief of staff.
Military commanders have come round to the idea that an increase of troops is likely to form the backbone of Bushs new strategy on Iraq. People are warming to the idea that some sort of surge is necessary, said a military official.
Robert Gates, the defence secretary, held talks with Bush, Condoleezza Rice, the secretary of state, and Stephen Hadley, the national security adviser, at Camp David yesterday, where he reported back on his three-day tour of Iraq. He said the willingness of Iraqis to step forward had advanced significantly.
Newt Gingrich, the former Republican Speaker of the House and a member of the defence policy board advising the Pentagon, is calling for a cross between the New Deal and the post-second world war Marshall Plan that would mop up every young Iraqi male who is unemployed. He said it would be as big a strategic step towards victory as whether you have more troops or fewer troops.
Gingrich believes his position as a staunch conservative could help to sell the reconstruction package to sceptical Republicans who argue that Iraq has already cost too money. The Pentagon this month requested an extra $100 billion from Congress as an emergency supplement to the 2007 military budget, bringing the total to $663 billion.
Americans have already spent nearly $40 billion on economic aid for Iraq, much of which has been squandered. Bushs proposals are likely to be more modest than the former speakers but he has been listening carefully to advice from generals such as Peter Chiarelli, who stepped down as head of the multinational forces in Iraq last week. He believes a US-funded, Iraqi-led job creation programme is essential to weaken the power of militias.
Bush is also thought to have been influenced by advice from retired General Jack Keane and Frederick Kagan, author of Choosing Victory, published by the American Enterprise Institute, a neoconservative think tank. The report, which advocates more troops, argues that reconstruction is a vital part of stabilising and securing the Iraqi population.
The military commanders have been emphasising this heavily, said Kagan. It is tremendously important. Were proposing that an economic team goes automatically into areas where the troops are sent in.
The plan is to extend significantly Chiarellis innovative use of Sweat teams (responsible for sewage, water, electricity and trash) to back up military operations.
Local leaders will be asked what they need to improve the quality of life in their neighbourhoods and the unemployed will be put to work. According to Kagan, the scale of the package should be linked to the degree of co-operation over disbanding militias and providing intelligence about insurgents.
Stephen Biddle, a military expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, who recently advised Bush at the Oval Office, is backing plans for economic reconstruction but is sceptical about its chances of success.
If Sunni death squads are murdering your relatives and youre afraid they will slaughter you if you compromise with the Americans, promising to rebuild the local health clinic wont help, he said.
There will be plenty of jobs for bagboys at the Anbar Air Force Base commisary.
He could always send all of those illegal immigrants making their way into the US over there to do the "jobs that Iraquis won't do".
That is true. It is really aggravating. I am pretty certain that the main result of this program will be to waste another 10 billion.
Of course more money is going to go into Iraq... D'oh! But $10 billion is not the focus of what is going to take place next in Iraq. This story is lame... lame.
Careful what you read...
GWB finding yet another way to spend tax dollars. These people have trillions in oil. Let them sell it and earn the danged money themselves, or at least pay it back.
See my post #28 for a small primer on a few of the problems.
what GWB is suggesting is exactly what Gen Garner suggested during a Cspan interview about his book.
I hate to see that much more money be going into that sinkhole, but at this point a military "crushing" operation would cost more than that.
Iraq was a pan arab socialistic country before we invaded and liberated the place, the only thing that has changed is that Iraqi's are attacking us for pay now, not out of ideology.
Besides, 10 Bn is nothing if gas goes to 5.00 a gallon.
Please allow me one "I said this was going to happen".
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1756499/posts?page=26#26
Yeah, but we still have to send money to Washington anyway!
The story is just an occasion for all these nobodies to show how much smarter they are than the ones in charge.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
Official: Casey Has Not Yet Recommended More Troops
Bush To Hold More Meetings On Strategy
POSTED: 10:16 pm EST December 23, 2006
UPDATED: 10:43 pm EST December 23, 2006
WASHINGTON -- President Bush, drafting an overhaul of his faltering and unpopular war plan, heard Saturday from a Pentagon chief who had just returned from Iraq with a positive impression of Iraqi leaders' plans to address sectarian violence.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates finished his first week on the job by delivering a report to Bush on the three days he spent talking with Iraqi leaders, U.S. commanders and American soldiers. The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Peter Pace, who traveled with Gates to Iraq, helped make the presentation.
The early-morning meeting at Camp David in Maryland's mountains lasted about an hour. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, national security adviser Stephen Hadley and Hadley's deputy, J.D. Crouch, who is coordinating the administration's Iraq review, also participated.
White House officials declined to disclose any details of the conversations. Bush is meeting with his national security team again Thursday at his ranch in Crawford, Texas.
"The president is pleased with the progress being made" to design a new policy, said Blain Rethmeier, a Bush spokesman. "The president is leaving all options on the table on the way forward."
With public support for the war falling as violence and U.S. deaths rise, Bush has been eager to show he is ready to make changes - even while he rejects calls from Democrats, who take control of Congress next month, for significant troop withdrawals to begin soon. The president has talked often in recent weeks about the long commitment America must make to Iraq.
He is expect to announce his revamped Iraq strategy in a speech to the nation between the New Year's Day and his Jan. 23 State of the Union address.
"If you're serving on the front lines halfway across the world, it is natural to wonder what all this means for you," Bush said Saturday in his weekly radio address. "I want our troops to know that while the coming year will bring change, one thing will not change, and that is our nation's support for you and the vital work you do to achieve a victory in Iraq."
There are several signs that a proposal to add thousands of U.S. troops to the 140,000 already in Iraq - as a way to control escalating violence, particularly in Baghdad - is gaining favor at the White House.
The Los Angeles Times reported Saturday that Gen. George Casey, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and other military leaders in Iraq, who had been the primary voices skeptical of a "surge" in troops, have decided to endorse the idea.
But Lt. Col. Christopher C. Garver, spokesman for Casey, said Saturday, "As of this time, General Casey has not recommended more troops be sent here." Rethmeier would neither confirm nor deny the Times story.
Bush has said he has changed his mind and now believes the Army and Marine Corps should be increased in overall size. This process would take years, but still could address some doubts in the military about the drain of even a short-term boost in Iraq.
And while saying he has not decided whether to deploy more U.S. soldiers, the president gave another nod to military leaders this week by making clear he agrees that any such troop infusion must have a mission that is clear and achievable.
During Gates' trip to Iraq, several soldiers told him they thought a short-term increase in troop levels would help. But the defense secretary repeatedly declined to say whether he would recommend such an increase.
Some important players at the Pentagon remain unconvinced that a significant troop increase would help and, in fact, worry it could do more harm than good by giving Iraqis incentive not to make their own inroads. Democrats and other critics also fear American troops will remain mired unless the Iraqis are forced by the prospect of an imminent withdrawal of U.S. soldiers to make progress.
While in Baghdad, Gates did praise Iraqi leaders for having "some concrete plans in mind" to deal with the deadly militias that have brought the country to the brink of civil war between the Shiite majority and Sunni minority. He left Casey with the assignment of putting "flesh on those bones" in consultations over the next few days with the Iraqi government, which has had little success so far reining in the militias or quelling the bloodshed.
Bush has said all along that U.S. troops cannot come home until Iraqis are able to secure and defend their own country without significant American assistance.
The military component of Bush's upcoming plan has drawn the most attention, but it is only one part of what is expected to be a multi-pronged strategy.
It also will include a way to improve the dismal economic picture in Iraq and a new approach to both diplomacy in the region and to the delicate - and deadly - political situation inside Iraq.
http://www.newsnet5.com/news/10599438/detail.html
So let us assume this plan calls for a Division of five combat Army brigades, with each combat brigade having an engineer battalion, a combat support battalion, and a field arty battalion. That is somewhere around 16,000 Army troops. Now toss in two Marine Regiments. Throw in the DoD and civilian support.
That is not going to happen on $10 billion. And it d@mn sure is not going to be sustainable for any period of time with current overall force levels. Unless one thinks it is wise to send troops on 18 month tours, give them 30 days R&R, and send them back for another 18 months.
LOL! I like your idea! ;)
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