WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President George W. Bush told Americans he was sending 21,500 more U.S. troops to Iraq but after dozens more death squad killings in the past day, Iraqis questioned on Thursday what difference they would make.
With American voters' patience wearing thin with a war that has cost over 3,000 soldiers' lives and killed tens of thousands of Iraqis, Bush bluntly told Iraq's prime minister "America's commitment is not open-ended".
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has announced his forces will mount a security crackdown in the capital that will also target militias loyal to his fellow Shi'ite leaders, a key demand of Washington and the once dominant Sunni minority who say death squad killers are trying to drive them from the city altogether.
Another 60 bodies were recovered by police on Wednesday. Sectarian rivalries that are pushing Iraqi toward all-out civil war were also running high over the killings of at least 11 Shi'ite pilgrims returning from last week's haj at Mecca.~snip~
Adding 17,500 troops in Baghdad and 4,000 in restive Sunni Anbar province to the west over the next four months would take the U.S. force in Iraq back close to 150,000 -- the level it was at four months ago, during a previous, unsuccessful, push to quash violence in Baghdad.more:
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