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bobdina
09-16-2009, 12:34 PM
President Barack Obama's top military adviser has endorsed an increase in U.S. forces for the worsening war in Afghanistan, setting up a split with leading Democrats in Congress and complicating an already tough decision for the President himself.

Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said yesterday the war is growing more complicated and the enemy gaining in sophistication. Winning will require more resources from outside Afghanistan, including more troops, he told Congress.

“A properly resourced counterinsurgency probably means more forces, and without question, more time” and dedication, Adm. Mullen said.

General Stanley McChrystal, the U.S. commander in charge of both American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, delivered a grim assessment of the war to Washington last month and is expected to follow up soon with a request for thousands of additional troops and more equipment.

That will leave Mr. Obama to decide whether to expand a war that polls say is rapidly losing public support in the U.S. and drawing pointed criticism in Congress. He has already roughly doubled the size of the U.S. military force in Afghanistan since taking office, with only limited gains to show. Mr. Obama has an ambitious strategy to turn around a war that will soon enter its ninth year, and his aides say the plan needs time to work.

Adm. Mullen said he does not know how many additional troops Gen. McChrystal will request, but he left no doubt that the commander has concluded that the 21,000 U.S. troops Mr. Obama has already approved are not enough.

Sitting opposite Adm. Mullen, the Democratic chairman of the Senate armed service committee was unswayed. Carl Levin warned the White House last week that he does not want to see a request for more troops until the United States takes bolder action to expand Afghanistan's own armed forces.

Several other Democrats have said they want a clearer timeline and measures of progress from the administration before approving large expansions of the troop commitment or mission. Congress has approved most of the money Mr. Obama requested for the war so far, but a large troop increase would probably require a separate add-on spending bill.

The head of the House's defence spending panel, Representative John Murtha, a Democrat, this week questioned the logic of adding troops.

“In Vietnam it took 500,000 troops and that didn't solve the problem,” the Vietnam veteran told the foreign policy blog the Cable. “We have to take a different approach.”

Recent national polls indicate slipping support for the war and growing doubt that it can be won.

Associated Press

Toki
09-16-2009, 04:41 PM
This doesn't need to be compared to Vietnam. That is no no rule number one.

GTFPDQ
09-16-2009, 06:13 PM
Its still in the American conscience, comparisons are inevitable.

nastyleg
09-16-2009, 07:30 PM
It doesnt need to be but it is being done. The one and only comparasionI can draw is the lack of intestional fortitude on the part of Congress.

ghost
09-17-2009, 07:23 PM
I think that we definitely need more troops on the ground. But we should probably be careful not to put too many there.