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-- Petraeus testimony (and report, which apparently is nonexistent now?)
Petraeus testimony (and report, which apparently is nonexistent now?)
Couldn't catch much of the Petraeus report today on C-span, nor could I catch much of the commentary on it today. What are your thoughts about his testimony? From what I initially gather, he said nothing surprising - let's stay in Iraq until things are all rosy?
Thoughts and comments from all sides welcome. I'll catch up a bit more on this when I have time.
I didnt watch their reports(had to go to work) but I did watch the begining when the congressmen were giving their speaches before Petraeus report and I must say the old man (forgot his name)democrat member(sitting on the left) gave a great speach and he said it like the way things really are,saying how the whole thing is a failure and this report is just an excuse for Bush wanting to stay in Iraq longer.
I read some op-ed piece about this being Bush's own "exit strategy". That he realised that the best way to save his own legacy is to just stay the course and let whoever replaces him deal with the Iraq pullout problem.
This way he could say that he tried his best and that he got some results.
Petreous would thus, in this context, just be a mouth piece for the adminstiration.
Unfortunately I can't find the link to that article anymore but I found the basic idea interesting.
Not quite. Maybe you guys should actually look at the report in some detail. He didnt just turn up and say ''Yes. Everything is going fine. We stay Iraq longer." (In robot voice)
He went into alot of detail about Iraq and explained where thing's have gone right aswell as wrong, concluding that Amercica had met most ofit's military goal's set out by the surge and that withdrawel of surge troops will be completed by Janurary.
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| Originally posted by The Arbiter Not quite. Maybe you guys should actually look at the report in some detail. |
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| He went into alot of detail about Iraq and explained where thing's have gone right aswell as wrong, concluding that Amercica had met most ofit's military goal's set out by the surge |
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| A senior military officer said there will be no written presentation to the president on security and stability in Iraq. �There is no report. It is an assessment provided by them by testimony,� the officer said. The only hard copy will be Gen. Petraeus� opening statement to Congress, scheduled for Monday, along with any charts he will use in explaining the results of the troop surge in Baghdad over the past several months. http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps...mplate=nextpage |
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| Despite Bush�s repeated statements that the report will reflect evaluations by Petraeus and Ryan Crocker, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, administration officials said it would actually be written by the White House, with inputs from officials throughout the government. And though Petraeus and Crocker will present their recommendations on Capitol Hill, legislation passed by Congress leaves it to the president to decide how to interpret the report�s data. http://www.latimes.com/news/nationw...=la-home-center |
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| Rep. Kendrick Meek (D-Fla.), told reporters Thursday that Petraeus said he and U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker had briefed the administration on the situation in Iraq, but added that �as far as [Petraeus] is concerned � he is writing his recommendations of that report and testimony.� http://thehill.com/leading-the-news...2007-08-30.html |
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| The intelligence community has its own problems with military calculations. Intelligence analysts computing aggregate levels of violence against civilians for the NIE puzzled over how the military designated attacks as combat, sectarian or criminal, according to one senior intelligence official in Washington. "If a bullet went through the back of the head, it's sectarian," the official said. "If it went through the front, it's criminal." http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...7090502466.html |
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| It is unclear whether sectarian violence in Iraq has decreased�a key security benchmark�since it is difficult to measure perpetrators� intents, and various other measures of population security from different sources show differing trends. As displayed in figure 4 (see above), average daily attacks against civilians have remained unchanged from February to July 2007. |
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| The person who provided the draft report to The Post said it was being conveyed from a government official who feared that its pessimistic conclusions would be watered down in the final version � as some officials have said happened with security judgments in this month�s National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...ml?hpid=topnews |
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| Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said that after reviewing a draft of the Government Accountability Office report � which has not yet been made public � policy officials �made some factual corrections� and �offered some suggestions on a few of the actual grades� assigned by the GAO. � �We have provided the GAO with information which we believe will lead them to conclude that a few of the benchmark grades should be upgraded from �not met� to �met,�� Morrell said. http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl...cs/5095399.html |
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| The NIE, requested by the White House Iraq coordinator, Lt. Gen. Douglas E. Lute, in preparation for the testimony, met with resistance from U.S. military officials in Baghdad, according to a senior U.S. military intelligence officer there. Presented with a draft of the conclusions, Petraeus succeeded in having the security judgments softened to reflect improvements in recent months, the official said. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...7082701917.html |
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| U.S. officials say the number of civilian casualties in the Iraqi capital is down 50 percent. But U.S. officials declined to provide specific numbers, and statistics gathered by McClatchy Newspapers don�t support the claim. http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/18927.html |
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| and that withdrawel of surge troops will be completed by Janurary. |
What's also worth noting is outgoing Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Peter Pace said this back in June about the levels of violence:
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| What�s most important is do the Iraqi people feel better about today than they did about yesterday, and do they think tomorrow�s going to be better than today? If the answer to those two questions is yes, then we�re on the right path. ....�it�s about progress � in the minds of the Iraqi people� http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...?nav=rss_nation |
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| 65 to 70 percent of Iraqis say the escalation has �worsened rather than improved security.� 78 percent say �things are going badly for the country overall,� up 13 points since winter. 39 percent say �their lives are going well,� down from 71 percent in Nov. 2005. 23 percent say things will be better in a year, one-third of the Nov. 2005 level. 23 percent report �effective reconstruction efforts in their local area,� down 10 points since March. 79 percent oppose the presence of coalition forces, unchanged since winter. 63 percent say it was wrong for the U.S. to have invaded Iraq, up from 52 percent in March and 39 percent in Feb. 2004. 47 percent now favor �immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces,� a 12-point rise since March. http://www.abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=3571504&page=1 |
Just to reiterate the point I was making earlier when I said:
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| Patraeus mentioned that the SURGE! troops can BEGIN redeploying in January and will be completed to pre-SURGE! levels by June, which BTW isn't any sign of progress at all. You want to know why they are being redeployed to pre-SURGE! troop levels? Welp, turns out that those troops in the SURGE! will be meeting their endpoint on their tours, and therefore HAVE to be redeployed. IOW, Patraeus has no choice but to redeploy these troops, unless he and the military are willing to extend the 15 month tours of these soldiers fighting in the SURGE! So sadly, some in our media (that darn librul media, of course) are so easily duped to believe that Patraeus is calling SUCCESS! loud enough to begin drawing down troops, but the reality is he had no choice but to redeploy these troops no matter what. |
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| Petraeus: Troop withdrawals by year's end The 30,000 additional troops deployed to Iraq in January could come home by next July, but further American withdrawals would be "premature," the U.S. commander there told a fractious congressional hearing Monday. http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/09...aeus/index.html |
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| NEWSWEEK has learned that a separate internal report being prepared by a Pentagon working group will �differ substantially� from Petraeus�s recommendations, according to an official who is privy to the ongoing discussions but would speak about them only on condition of anonymity. An early version of the report, which is currently being drafted and is expected to be completed by the beginning of next year, will �recommend a very rapid reduction in American forces: as much as two-thirds of the existing force very quickly, while keeping the remainder there.� The strategy will involve unwinding the still large U.S. presence in big forward operation bases and putting smaller teams in outposts. �There is interest at senior levels [of the Pentagon] in getting alternative views� to Petraeus, the official said. Among others, Centcom commander Admiral William Fallon is known to want to draw down faster than Petraeus. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/2071219...sweek/?from=rss |
It's all academic as Patraeus' 'testimony' if you would rather call it that for technical reasons, reflected his opinion. Wether the hardcopy will be written by the whitehouse or not, you get around the propoganda by paying attention when the event take's place. I was glued to the entire day's news report's on CH4 (British Tele for anyone confused.) as they reported on what Patraeus had said. CH4 is famed for cutting out the propoganda and the bullshit knowing that politics nowerday's is all about dodging the question. They acknowledged that Patraeus was largely accurate, not proclaiming a winning battle as Bush tend's to but labbelling successes and failure's.
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| Furthermore, how come Patraeus' "report" differs drastically from the mere 3 out of 18 political and military benchmarks sent out by the initial GAO draft report?: |
found a list of excerpts from his report...The impression I got...things are getting better, but they still suck:
http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/09...eus-report.html
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| Originally posted by The Arbiter It's all academic as Patraeus' 'testimony' if you would rather call it that for technical reasons, reflected his opinion. Wether the hardcopy will be written by the whitehouse or not, you get around the propoganda by paying attention when the event take's place. I was glued to the entire day's news report's on CH4 (British Tele for anyone confused.) as they reported on what Patraeus had said. CH4 is famed for cutting out the propoganda and the bullshit knowing that politics nowerday's is all about dodging the question. They acknowledged that Patraeus was largely accurate, not proclaiming a winning battle as Bush tend's to but labbelling successes and failure's. |
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| Last time I looked congress was largely democrat (If I'm wrong correct me, Im not exactly an expert on the American democratic system. Hell, it confuses me most of the time.) and will be against the war full stop ---->. I can't see them setting out realistic goals in a long term war because if they did, they might be acheived reflecting well on the Republicans. It reflect's differently because the report is based on the White Houses goals and benchmark's, not congresses and let's not forget it's actually the White House raging this war. |
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| This important bill also provides a clear roadmap to help the Iraqis secure their country and strengthen their young democracy. Iraqis need to demonstrate measurable progress on a series of benchmarks for improved security, political reconciliation, and governance. These tasks will be difficult for this young democracy, but we are confident they will continue to make progress on the goals they have set for themselves. http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/rele...0070525-11.html |
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| I�ve made it clear to the Prime Minister and Iraq�s other leaders that America�s commitment is not open-ended. If the Iraqi government does not follow through on its promises, it will lose the support of the American people � and it will lose the support of the Iraqi people. Now is the time to act. The Prime Minister understands this. Here is what he told his people just last week: �The Baghdad security plan will not provide a safe haven for any outlaws, regardless of [their] sectarian or political affiliation�. (�) A successful strategy for Iraq goes beyond military operations. Ordinary Iraqi citizens must see that military operations are accompanied by visible improvements in their neighborhoods and communities. So America will hold the Iraqi government to the benchmarks it has announced. http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.c...marks-then.html |
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