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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (8193)12/29/2003 11:02:51 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
The Thinning of the Army
Editorial
The New York Times

December 29, 2003


Over a third of the Army's active-duty combat troops are now in Iraq,

and by spring the Pentagon plans to let most of them come home for
urgently needed rest. Many will have served longer than a normal
overseas tour and under extremely harsh conditions. When the 130,000
Americans rotate out for home leave, nearly the same number will rotate in.
At that point, should the country need to send additional fighters
anywhere else in the world, it will have dangerously few of them to spare.

This is the clearest warning yet that the Bush administration is pushing
America's peacetime armed forces toward their limits.
Washington will
not be able to sustain the mismatch between unrealistic White House
ambitions and finite Pentagon means much longer without long-term
damage to our military strength. The only solution is for the
Bush administration to return to foreign policy sanity, starting with a more
cooperative, less vindictive approach to European allies who
could help share America's military burdens.


Long months under constant threat of rocket attacks, roadside
ambushes and deadly confrontations with civilians in Iraq have left tens of
thousands of American soldiers tired, jumpy and badly in need of a break,
one that should last at least several months. Most American strategists
fear at least a temporary upsurge in attacks as the troop rotations
get under way and maneuvering to produce an interim Iraqi government
intensifies.

Well over 100,000 American troops will be needed for many more
months, unless the Bush administration starts wooing NATO allies instead of
snubbing them. Eventually, the Iraqi recruits now being hurriedly trained
may provide some relief. Yet there are doubts about their military
competence and political reliability, and fears that if Washington
is in too much of a hurry, it will succeed only in recreating Saddam Hussein's old
security forces in new American-issued uniforms.

Meanwhile, if a sudden crisis were to erupt in North Korea, Afghanistan
or elsewhere, the Pentagon might be hard pressed to respond.
For a time,
it could make do by sending tired troops back into action, mobilizing
reserves and borrowing forces from areas that are quiet but still highly volatile.
Such expedients have severe long-term costs. The White House must
recognize the damage its unilateralism is inflicting on the Army and change
course before the damage becomes harder to undo.


Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company
nytimes.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (8193)12/30/2003 12:52:40 PM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
It is likely that Bush will re-start the draft!

Not before the election.

Enlistments are down, so you are probably right.

news-leader.com
nzherald.co.nz