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All new U.S. Iraq troops will be ready -commanders
27 Feb 2007 20:05:41 GMT
Source: Reuters

WASHINGTON, Feb 27 (Reuters) - All U.S. military units sent to Iraq as part of a troop increase ordered by President George W. Bush will be fully trained and equipped, commanders promised on Tuesday, after Democratic contentions that the Pentagon could not afford to do so.

Rep. John Murtha, a leading Democratic opponent of the war, has proposed forcing the Pentagon to certify that all the extra troops meet conditions including being fully trained and having at least a year at home between combat deployments.

Murtha has suggested the measure would effectively block the planned increase of some 20,000 troops as the military, stretched by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, would be unable to meet the conditions.

But commanders said troops being deployed as part of Bush's plan announced last month to send more troops to crack down on sectarian and insurgent violence gripping Baghdad and other parts of Iraq would be trained and equipped to the same standard as those already there.

"Our deploying units will be manned, trained and equipped and they will be ready for their specified missions," Maj. Gen. Richard Formica, the U.S. Army's director of force management, told a news briefing at the Pentagon.

Brig. Gen. Charles Anderson, the Army's director of force modernization, said the extra units had already received most of the equipment they needed and were on track to get the remainder by the time of their deployment.

"We do not compromise our standards in force protection for deploying units," he said.

Formica said he was not aware of specific conditions being proposed in Congress but no soldier would go to Iraq unless they were fully ready in terms of training and equipment.

He also said all five of the Army combat brigades being sent to Iraq in the next few months under Bush's plan would not have been deployed in the last year, except for one brigade which had already moved into Iraq from Kuwait.
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South Korean protesters shout slogans as they hold a picture of Sergeant Yoon Jang-ho, near the U.S. embassy in Seoul March 1, , 2007, at a rally to mourn the late sergeant Yoon who was among those killed in a bomb attack outside a U.S. military base in Afghanistan where U.S. vice President Dick Cheney was visiting. Dozens of anti-war demonstrators rallied on Thursday demanding the withdrawal of South Korean troops from Iraq and Afghanistan. The placard reads, "South Korean President Roh's participation in the Iraq war has killed them."