Thursday, October 12, 2006

Top U.S. Commander: Iraq getting better except for Baghdad; doubts more troops would make a difference


WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 (UPI) -- The U.S. general in charge of Iraq says there has been significant progress in quelling violence in Iraq with the exception of Baghdad.

At a Washington briefing, U.S. Army Gen. George Casey said despite the daily news of sectarian violence in the capital, much of the rest of the country was relatively calm and the training and development of Iraqi security forces was making headway.

He said he had no immediate plans to ask for more U.S. troops to bolster the 140,000 there but said it remained an option, The Washington Post reported.

"There's no question locally, more troops will have some affect on the levels of violence, but whether more U.S. troops for a sustained period will get us where we're going faster is an open question," Casey said.

Read the rest at UPI

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