. . . on the timetable for the Iraqi pullout. But, I'm not certain that there isn't a group of military advisers and military leaders who would have counseled a quicker, more thorough withdrawal.
Problem is, the announced withdrawal is reportedly a '
compromise' between the president's position and that of the military leadership he's chosen; many of those in that leadership Bush holdovers who supported and defended the very policy of escalation and prolonging the occupation that Mr. Obama campaigned so vigorously against.
“The president has been struck by the fact that there has been a meeting of the minds in a lot of ways among his military advisers about what would be a safe and responsible way to redeploy our troops while protecting our interests in Iraq,”
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/25/washington/25troops.html?_r=1&ref=politics&pagewanted=print">said a senior administration official.
I know . . . the mantra from supporters of his announced intentions point out that he's been mostly consistent in what he campaigned on - including his call for a remaining 'residual force' to fight 'al-Qaeda' and 'protect interests'. The military describes it as protecting the 'gains' they've made in supporting the Maliki regime in power and authority.
The three month difference reported from the 16-month exit he promised is really insignificant, in the broader scheme of things. But, those who took notice of the increasingly strident rhetoric in the campaign against the occupation can't help object to the new administration's insistence on attaching legitimacy and prudence to our military's destabilizing presence in Iraq.
I seriously doubt that the 'training' of Iraqi forces will entail much more than our troops' joint presence on the Iraqi force's opportunistic raids against whatever part of the population they deem threatening. And the mission of 'fighting terrorists' in Iraq is merely the flailing of our military force against the ghosts of resistance to our occupation of the Iraqi's homeland.
The exit of 100,000 or so of our troops from Iraq will be a welcome development. That goes without saying. The relief for the families, however, will have to be tempered by the obligations which are made regarding the military mission in Afghanistan which could actually keep the level of those deployed abroad into combat where it is today for an extended period of time
Hopefully, the side of the Obama administration which had our troops out of Iraq in 16 months will assert themselves more forcefully against the entrenched military supporters of Bush's military legacy. I thought that's what the election was all about.