Withdrawal From Iraq? Not With All These Shiny U.S. Bases…
TomDispatch warns that the presence of American "super bases" in Iraq belies the idea that the U.S. will pull out of the country any time soon.TomDispatch.com:
We’re in a new period in the war in Iraq — one that brings to mind the Nixonian era of “Vietnamization”: A President presiding over an increasingly unpopular war that won’t end; an election bearing down; the need to placate a restive American public; and an army under so much strain that it seems to be running off the rails. So it’s not surprising that the media is now reporting on administration plans for, or “speculation” about, or “signs of,” or “hints” of “major draw-downs” or withdrawals of American troops. The figure regularly cited these days is less than 100,000 troops in Iraq by the end of 2006. With about 136,000 American troops there now, that figure would represent just over one-quarter of all in-country U.S. forces, which means, of course, that the term “major” certainly rests in the eye of the beholder.
In addition, these withdrawals are — we know this thanks to a Seymour Hersh piece, Up in the Air, in the December 5th New Yorker — to be accompanied, as in South Vietnam in the Nixon era, by an unleashing of the U.S. Air Force. The added air power is meant to compensate for any lost punch on the ground (and will undoubtedly lead to more “collateral damage” — that is, Iraqi deaths).
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