It must be the holidays, because, once again,
the administration is holding out the prospect of drawing down troop levels
in Iraq. Two years ago, then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld hinted at
the possibility of U.S. troop
reductions in Iraq when he announced that two brigades scheduled for combat
tours would not be deployed and that troop levels might fall below 130,000 U.S.
soldiers in March (the force size in Iraq at the time was about 138,000). Last
Christmas, there was no happy talk about bringing troops home because the administration
was gearing up for the current surge of troops due to lack of success on the
security front (the surge has resulted in about 158,800 U.S. soldiers currently
in Iraq). But, in Orwellian fashion, even
the surge was portrayed as a way to reduce troop levels – the so-called
"Go Long" strategy that called for a short-term boost in troop levels
but a smaller force over the longer term with less emphasis on combat troops
and more emphasis on advisers and trainers (what one defense official described
as "Go Big but Short While Transitioning to Go Long"). Now, Secretary
of Defense Robert Gates is holding
out the prospect that five brigade combat teams (BCTs) could be withdrawn
from Iraq by the middle of 2008 and another five BCTs in the second half of
the year – leaving 100,000 U.S. troops in Iraq at the end of next year.
Of course, all this talk about bringing U.S. troops home is conditional. In
2005, then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff U.S. Marine Corps Gen. Peter
Pace said,
"If things go the way we expect them to, as more Iraqi units stand up,
we'll be able to bring our troops down and turn over that territory to the Iraqis."
But – and there's always a but – he also said, "But on the other hand,
the enemy has a vote in this, and if they were to cause some kind of problems
that required more troops, then we would do exactly what we've done in the past,
which is give the commanders on the ground what they need. And in that case,
you could see troop level go up a little bit to handle that problem."
Two years later, Gates emphasizes that any troop reductions in Iraq are "conditions-based."
The good news is that violence in Iraq is currently at its lowest levels since
2003, which is the reason for expressing some optimism about being able to bring
U.S. troops home. But according to Maj. Gen. Joseph Fil, the outgoing U.S. commander
in Baghdad, the current situation is "fledgling,
fragile and not guaranteed." Hence, according to Fil, "There is
absolutely the risk of going to quickly." The reality is that not much
has changed since Bush declared "As
Iraqis stand up, we will stand down" in August 2005. Since the current
conditions are not guaranteed and are believed to be possible only because of
the larger U.S. force presence, they could easily change – which would mean
continuing to stay rather than go.
Indeed, it seems that – even if U.S. forces are reduced over the course of
the next year as Gates hopes – the United States will stay in Iraq for some
time. According to a declaration
of principles signed by President Bush and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki,
the United States is now committed to a "long-term relationship" with
Iraq that includes "security assurances and commitments" to defend
Iraq "against internal and external threats." Some Iraqi officials
foresee a continued presence of 50,000 U.S. troops (about one-third of the current
size of the U.S. Army) as a security
guarantee.
Ultimately, home for the holidays is a false hope. Not only will American soldiers
not be coming home from Iraq for the holidays this year to be reunited with
their loved ones, they are not likely to be coming home for a while – even in
a post-Bush administration world. After all, at a September
2007 New Hampshire debate, none of the leading Democratic candidates were
willing to guarantee that all U.S. troops would be pulled out of Iraq by the
end of their first term in 2013.