Forward from mart.

"Mission accomplished!" "All major fighting in Iraq is over!"

George W. Bush.
*May 1, 2003*

Hmmm??? This is now *October, 2004*!  Wonder why ol' George is cancelling home leave 
for these 6500 U.S occupation troops, since 
according to Bush, "All major fighting" ended  over 17 months ago??
Wonder what the other 140,000 U.S. or so occupation troops are 
still doing there too???!!!  Murderous, lying bastard!! : )

mart
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----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "NYTr List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, October 30, 2004 9:44 AM
Subject: [NYTr] Iraq Tours Extended for 
Another 6,500 US Troops


The NY Times - Oct 30, 2004
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/30/international/middleeast/30military.html


As Iraq Elections Near, Pentagon Extends 
Tours of Duty for About 6,500 U.S. Soldiers

by Thom Shanker

WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 - The Pentagon has ordered about 6,500 soldiers in 
Iraq to extend their tours, the first step the military has taken to 
increase its combat power there in preparation for the January 
elections, senior Defense Department officials said Friday.

About 3,500 members of the Second Brigade of the First Cavalry Division 
will stay in Iraq two months longer than initially ordered, and about 
3,000 soldiers assigned to headquarters and support units of the First 
Infantry Division will have their tours extended by two and a half weeks.

While Pentagon officials and military officers previously had left open 
the possibility that additional troops would be required to battle a 
tenacious insurgency ahead of the elections, they had also expressed 
hopes that new Iraqi security forces or foreign units might fill the 
need. The decision to extend the stay of American forces in Iraq at a 
time when replacement troops also are arriving means a significant 
increase in the overall American combat presence for the first time 
since the summer.

No other extensions have been approved, and no units now preparing for Iraq duty have 
been ordered to speed up their departure, according to Pentagon and military officials.


But senior Defense Department officials said they had considered plans that would 
allow the American military in Iraq to quickly increase its forces by as many as three 
brigades - a total of as many as 15,000 troops, the combat power of a traditional Army 
division - but that no steps had been taken other than the extensions discussed Friday.


If Gen. John P. Abizaid, commander of American forces in the Middle East, requests 
even more troops, it is possible that the Third Infantry Division, which led the drive 
for Baghdad during the war and is set to return to Iraq in January, could speed the 
arrival of some combat units, officials said. Other options also are under 
consideration.


Under the extension orders, which have been approved by Defense 
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, the soldiers whose departures are delayed will still 
leave Iraq for their home bases before the 12-month deployment limit promised by the 
Army, as the units had initially been given assignments of less than a year.


The order will result in some good news for about 3,000 members of the 42nd Infantry 
Division of the New York National Guard, based in Troy. Those soldiers are to replace 
the headquarters units of the First Infantry Division whose stay in Iraq is being 
extended, and the 
departure for Iraq of those 42nd Infantry Division soldiers is to be 
delayed by up to 60 days, allowing many to spend the holiday season at home.


Their slowed departure is necessary because there will be no living 
space or equipment for those members of the 42nd Division until the First Infantry 
Division soldiers leave. While the additional time will 
allow for more training, two senior Defense Department officials said the delay was a 
matter of logistics and infrastructure, and not a 
reflection on readiness of those New York National Guard soldiers.


The Islamic holy month of Ramadan has already prompted a 25 percent increase in daily 
attacks, according to Pentagon officials. But these officials said they had seen no 
indication yet of a major insurgent offensive like the one a year ago. But military 
commanders said they must prepare for a guerrilla offensive that could come in 
November or December, as voter registration gets under way in earnest, or for attacks 
timed to the elections in January.


Pentagon and military officials said commanders were already planning to take 
advantage of the overlap of arriving and departing soldiers around the time of the 
elections, as that offers a natural, if temporary, increase in troop strength in 
certain areas. The number of American troops in Iraq has averaged about 138,000 since 
the summer.


General Abizaid, said one senior Defense Department official, "wanted the most 
experienced forces available to us" as the election approached. Time already spent in 
Iraq has allowed those troops to gain combat experience and to develop important ties 
with Iraqi leaders and the local population that cannot be immediately replaced by 
arriving forces, the official said.


Military officers in Baghdad said Friday that soldiers of the Second 
Brigade of the First Cavalry Division had already been informed of the decision to 
delay their mid-November departure until mid-January. The First Cavalry Division is 
responsible for security in Baghdad, including the Sadr City district that is a center 
of Shiite unrest. Senior officials described the Second Brigade as "a very seasoned 
force" that would serve as an "operational reserve" and quick-reaction force during 
its two-month extension.


The headquarters units of the First Infantry Division now will depart on Feb. 14 
instead of Jan. 27. The division is deployed north of Baghdad in restive Sunni Muslim 
cities, including Samarra, Balad and Baquba.


In the previous troop rotation this year, 250,000 American soldiers 
changed places in Iraq in the largest shift of troops since World War 
II. While successful, the quick pace of the rotation put a huge strain 
on the military's air and sea transportation system, on temporary 
deployment bases in Kuwait and on the Iraqi road system. Military 
officials decided to spread the new round of troop replacements over a longer period, 
with the bulk arriving and departing between this fall and spring 2005.


To make that new, longer rotation timetable work, some units were 
scheduled for only 10 months in Iraq, including those now scheduled for extension.


The Army has previously had to extend deployments for soldiers in Iraq, causing 
complaints from some soldiers and some of their families.


The first extension was for some troops of the Third Infantry Division after the end 
of major combat operations. The second was earlier this year, when the First Armored 
Division had its yearlong tour extended by 90 days. The division was sent south from 
Baghdad to put down the first uprising of a militia loyal to the rebel cleric Moktada 
al-Sadr.

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