Given that mainstream is not using the other "I" word on the surge, the
Time magazine analysis of the president's surge (same title as quoted portion of above) is very good
Excerpt:
For years now, George W. Bush has told Americans that he would increase the number of troops in Iraq only if the commanders on the ground asked him to do so. It was not a throwaway line: Bush said it from the very first days of the war, when he and Pentagon boss Donald Rumsfeld were criticized for going to war with too few troops. He said it right up until last summer, stressing at a news conference in Chicago that Iraq commander General George Casey "will make the decisions as to how many troops we have there." Seasoned military people suspected that the line was a dodge--that the civilians who ran the Pentagon were testing their personal theory that war can be fought on the cheap and the brass simply knew better than to ask for more. In any case, the President repeated the mantra to dismiss any suggestion that the war was going badly. Who, after all, knew better than the generals on the ground? Now, as the war nears the end of its fourth year and the number of Americans killed has surpassed 3,000, Bush has dropped the generals-know-best line. Sometime next week the President is expected to propose a surge in the number of U.S. forces in Iraq for a period of up to two years. A senior official said reinforcements numbering "about 20,000 troops," and maybe more, could be in place within months.
(And in fact, notice that Bush changed his top generals to ones who would back a 'surge')
I recommend reading the entire many page report. A lot of details are in it that would be hilarious if this weren't such a tragic mess.
Note that the American Enterprise Institute is recognized here as Bush's guide in war along with other endeavors.
Also, note that the surge is actually a plan to cover a "withdrawal" later of either the troops or of the president from office in 2009.
As I have maintained before the withdrawal could also be into Iran, though the Time article does not say that.
tags: iraq war bush almaliki troop surge iran
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