Pentagon team reviews Iraq war strategy - NYT
NEW YORK, (Reuters)
Top U.S. military leaders have begun a broad review of strategy in
Iraq and other crisis areas in the Bush administration's campaign
against terrorism, The New York Times reported in Saturday editions.
Citing Pentagon officials, the Times reported that Joint Chiefs of
Staff Chairman Gen. Peter Pace had assembled a team of what it called
some of the military's brightest and most innovative officers and
charged them with taking a fresh look at Iraq, Afghanistan and other
flashpoints.
Pace announced the review in a series of television interviews on
Friday but did not give many details.
The New York Times said that among ideas discussed were increasing
the size of the Iraqi security forces, along with U.S. efforts to train
and equip them, and adjusting the size of the American force in Iraq.
It added that Pentagon officials stressed that the review extended
well beyond Iraq, and that some unorthodox ideas on how to fight
terrorism were being weighed.
The military review, which formally began Sept. 25, is being
coordinated with the rest of the government, but the team has not met
with members of the Iraq Study Group, the commission that is also
looking into options for Iraq, the Times said, citing the Pentagon
officials. The officials said the team's objective was to outline
options that Pace might draw on in advising President George W. Bush and
Robert Gates, Bush's choice for the new defense secretary.
The team involved in the military review includes Col. H. R.
McMaster, an Army officer whose 2005 operation in Tal Afar has been
cited as a textbook case in how to wage counterinsurgency in Iraq, as
well as Col. Peter Mansoor, the director of the United States Army and
Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Center at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., who
commanded an Army brigade that fought the Mahdi Army militia in 2004 at
Karbala, the newspaper reported.
Also on the team is Col. Thomas Greenwood, the director of the Marine
Command and Staff College who oversaw efforts to train Iraqi security
forces in Anbar, the Times said. In all, more than a dozen military
officers are on the team, which is overseen by Capt. Michael Rogers of
the Navy, a special assistant to Pace, the report said.
The review, which includes the participation of Gen. George Casey
Jr., the top commander in Iraq, and General John Abizaid, the head of
the United States Central Command, is meant to be completed in early
December. |