
Last week, most of the media's and
public's attention was focused on President Bush's announcement that he would
be sending another 20,000-plus troops to Iraq – a move opposed by 70 percent
of the American people. Nonetheless, the president refuses to let public
opinion change his mind (he has famously said, "As to whether or not I
make decisions based upon polls. I don't.") and on CBS' 60 Minutes
proclaimed, "I've made my decision. And we're going forward." And
despite bipartisan criticism from Capitol Hill, there is probably no way for
Congress to stop the president from pouring more troops into Iraq. According
to National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley, "We have authority in the –
we have money in the '07 budget, which has been appropriated by the Congress,
to move these troops to Iraq,
and the president will be doing that."
Less, noticed, however was Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates' recommendation that the U.S. Army and Marine Corps be
expanded by 92,000 soldiers (65,000 and 27,000, respectively) over the next
five years. This is considerably more than expanding the force by 7,000
soldiers a year to keep the Army from breaking under the strain of the Iraq
deployment, as previously called for by outgoing Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter
Schoomaker. So the current proposed troop surge of 21,500 soldiers in Iraq could just
be the tip of the iceberg. After all, Gates is on record during his
confirmation hearing that "the United States
is going to have to have some presence in Iraq for a long time."
Or maybe more troops are needed for a
potential showdown with Iran?
When he announced his intention to increase the number of U.S. troops in Iraq,
President Bush also said, "Succeeding in Iraq also requires defending its
territorial integrity and stabilizing the region in the face of extremist
challenges. This begins with addressing Iran
and Syria.
These two regimes are allowing terrorists and insurgents to use their territory
to move in and out of Iraq.
Iran
is providing material support for attacks on American troops."
Subsequently, U.S. forces
raided the Iranian consulate in Irbil and
arrested five men, claiming links to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard and aiding
insurgents in Iraq.
And Vice President Cheney's rhetoric is eerily reminiscent of how he tried to
make Saddam Hussein a target:
"And Iran's a problem in a much larger
sense. They have begun to conduct themselves in ways that have created a great
deal of tension throughout the region. If you go and talk with the Gulf states
or if you talk with the Saudis or if you talk about the Israelis or the
Jordanians, the entire region is worried, partly because of the conduct of Mr.
Ahmadinejad, the president of Iran, who appears to be a radical, a man who
believes in an apocalyptic vision of the future and who thinks it's imminent.
"At the same time, of course, they're
pursuing the acquisition of nuclear weapons. They are in a position where they
sit astride the Straits of Hormuz, where over 20 percent of the world's supply
of oil transits every single day, over 18 million barrels a day.
"They use Hezbollah as a surrogate.
And working through Syria
with Hezbollah, they're trying to topple the democratically elected government
in Iran.
Working through Hamas and their support for Hamas in Gaza, they're interfering in the peace
process.
"So the threat that Iran represents
is growing, it's multi-dimensional, and it is, in fact, of concern to everybody
in the region."
While the need for expanding the armed
forces by 92,000 ground troops is an important question, another important
question is: Where would the soldiers come from?
The military is already having a hard time
just keeping the current force in place. The Iraq mission has forced deployments
to be extended, keeping troops in the field longer than their normal rotation.
And to keep soldiers from leaving when their enlistments expire, the military
has resorted to stop-loss orders to keep tens of thousands of soldiers. Recent
Military Times poll numbers don't bode well for retaining troops who have grown
disillusioned with the Iraq war: only 35 percent of the military approved of
the way President Bush is handling the Iraq war and 42 percent disapproved (the
first time that more troops have disapproved than approved); only 41 percent
thought the United States should have gone to war.
The good news for the Army and Marine
Corps is that both services meet their active-duty recruiting goals for fiscal
year 2006 – 80,000 and 32,302, respectively (both services have also meet their
recruiting goals for the first three months of fiscal year 2007). But one price
paid to meet recruiting goals has been lowering standards. For fiscal year
2006, nearly 4 percent (the maximum allowed by the Defense Department) of Army
recruits scored below certain aptitude levels – so-called Category 4 recruits
who represent the lowest end of the testing spectrum. More worrisome is the
fact that about 17 percent of the Army's recruits were accepted under waivers
for medical, moral, or criminal problems. Accepting more Category 4 recruits
and granting waivers allowed both services to only
just barely meet their recruiting goals, so where are they going to find an
additional 18,000 soldiers a year for the next five years?
Even if the Army and Marine Corps can find
men and women to fill their ranks, there is also the question of cost. The
Defense Department is already spending more than $ 450 billion a year in its
baseline budget. Four defense supplemental requests to fund ongoing military
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan
have totaled $ 294 billion, and the most recent supplemental request is
expected to be at least billion. According to the Army, every additional 10,000
troops would cost about $ 1.2 billion a year. So adding 92,000 soldiers would
cost about $ 110 billion.
If we were engaged in a war of national
survival – such as World War II – the cost of recruiting soldiers to defend the
country would not be an issue. But Iraq is not World War II. Nor is it
the central front in the war in terrorism. Iraq
was never a military or terrorist threat to the United States. It has now become
someone else's civil war and rather than continuing to be caught in the
crossfire between Sunnis and Shi'ites, the United States should be thinking
about how to get out – not about how to put more soldiers in or increasing the
size of the Army and Marine Corps to sustain the force in Iraq for years to
come.
Charles Peña
Source: AntiWar