WASHINGTON, Sept. 25 — The commander of United States forces in the Persian Gulf said today that he was no longer counting on foreign troops to relieve American soldiers in Iraq early next year. A lack of foreign troops would require the Pentagon would have to send active-duty and National Guard soldiers to fill the gap.
The commander, Gen. John P. Abizaid, said he had until Wednesday to tell the Joint Chiefs of Staff whether sufficient allied forces would be available to replace American forces in Iraq.
But the administration's negotiations with allies to provide more troops have so far proved fruitless, and General Abizaid said that he could no longer assume there will be large-scale international support, and that the Pentagon had to begin deciding how to make up for the shortage of foreign troops.
"Since it doesn't look like we'll have a coalition brigade, we have no choice but to plan for American forces," General Abizaid told reporters after he testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/26/international/middleeast/26MILI.html