http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/789F031A-B42B-40E9-A800-0FEC94A73B52.htm
UPDATED ON:
THURSDAY, MARCH 08, 2007
12:32 MECCA TIME, 9:32 GMT

            Petraeus: Force will not solve Iraq   
           
           
     
           
                             
                               Petraeus took command of US troops in Iraq last 
month [AP] 


                       
                  The new US military commander in Iraq has admitted that 
military might alone cannot solve the ongoing violence in the country.

                  General David Petraeus, in his first news conference in 
Baghdad since he took command last month, said: "There is no military solution 
to a problem like that in Iraq, to the insurgency of Iraq.
                       

                  "Military action is necessary to help improve security ... 
but it is not sufficient."

                  He said political progress would require talking to, and 
reconciling with, some of the militant groups in Iraq, describing them as "... 
some of those who have felt the new Iraq did not have a place for them".
                       
                        
                       
                  He said a challenge for the Shia-led government of Nuri 
al-Maliki was to identify those armed groups who were "reconcilable" and to 
bring them into the political process.
                   

                  Petraus said "sensational attacks [by armed groups] would 
inevitably continue" in Baghdad and the current US-led crackdown in the capital 
would take months. 



                  His comments came as Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, 
approved a request by Petraeus for an extra 2,200 US military policemen, in 
addition to 21,500 soldiers and 2,400 support troops being sent to Baghdad by 
the administration of George Bush, the US president.

                  Widespread anger

                  The request for extra troops comes amid fierce opposition in 
the Democratic-controlled congress to the increase in troops and polls that 
show little public support in north America for expanding the size of the force.

                  Democrats are pushing for a timetable for withdrawal of 
troops after widespread anger at the war handed them victory in last November's 
mid-term elections.
                   
                  Gates last month assured congress that only about 2,000 to 
3,000 support troops would be needed in addition to the combat forces that will 
add to the 141,000 US troops now in Iraq.

                   

                  But Gordon England, the deputy defence secretary, told 
legislators on Tuesday that between 4,000 and 7,000 more support troops were 
required for the Baghdad security operation.

                   

                  Gates said there were other requests that had been made for 
additional troops that had not yet been approved.



                  Daily carnage



                  Asked about reports the additional 21,500 troops would have 
to stay in Iraq until early 2008, Petraeus said: "I've certainly not reached a 
conclusion yet about that.



                  "I think you generally think that if you're going to achieve 
the kind of effects that we probably need, I would think it would need to be 
sustained certainly some time well beyond the summer, but again we'll have to 
see."



                  Petraeus took command of US troops in Iraq last month at a 
critical time, having been appointed to oversee Bush's new strategy in Iraq, 
focusing on halting the daily carnage of suicide bombs and death squad killings 
in Baghdad.



                  At least 3,188 American soldiers have died since the US-led 
invasion of Iraq in 2003, according to Reuters news agency.



                  An estimated 655,000 Iraqis, 2.5 per cent of the population, 
have been killed as a result of the invasion, according to an estimate in 
October by the Lancet, the British medical journal, and the John Hopkins 
Bloomberg School of Public Health in the city of Baltimore in Maryland, US.



                  Some academics and politicians have disputed the estimate.

                       
                 
           
     


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