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d-14821House OversightOther

Wall Street Journal Op-Ed: 'It's in America's Interest to Stay in Iraq' by Max Boot (April 18, 2011)

The passage is a standard opinion piece discussing Secretary of Defense Robert Gates' statements about a possible continued U.S. presence in Iraq. It contains no new factual allegations, financial det Bob Gates visited Iraq in early April 2011 urging Iraqi leaders to request a continued U.S. presence The article frames the Obama administration as taking a hands‑off approach to Iraq. U.S. troops ar

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #023510
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a standard opinion piece discussing Secretary of Defense Robert Gates' statements about a possible continued U.S. presence in Iraq. It contains no new factual allegations, financial det Bob Gates visited Iraq in early April 2011 urging Iraqi leaders to request a continued U.S. presence The article frames the Obama administration as taking a hands‑off approach to Iraq. U.S. troops ar

Tags

bob-gatesiraqus-militaryhouse-oversightobama-administrationforeign-policy

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
24 Article 5. Wall Street Journal It's in America's Interest to Stay in Iraq Max Boot April 18, 2011 -- Secretary of Defense Bob Gates was in Iraq early this month urging Iraqi leaders to decide whether they want U.S. forces to stay beyond Dec. 31. "If there is to be a presence, to help with some of the areas where [the Iraqis] still need help," he said, "we're open to that possibility. But they have to ask." This is a small, belated, but welcome step in the right direction. Until now the Obama administration has taken a hands-off attitude in Iraq, giving every indication that it would be fine with a complete pullout of the 50,000 U.S. troops currently in the country. This would presumably allow the president to make good on his 2008 campaign pledge to "end the war"--although U.S. troops aren't engaged in much of a war at the moment. They are primarily involved in training, assisting and advising Iraqi forces, conducting counterterrorism missions, and serving as a buffer force to reassure all sides in Iraq's fractious politics that their opponents will not resort to force to achieve their ends. The reassurance provided by U.S. forces is important, given that violence continues to be perpetrated by Sunni and Shiite extremist groups, including al Qaeda in Iraq, whose premature obituary has been written more than once. U.S. forces play a particularly important role as a peacekeeper between the Kurdish peshmerga militia and the Iraqi Security Forces along the ill-defined frontier (the "Green Line") between Iraq proper and the Kurdish Regional Government. On a visit to Iraq last month, I encountered the umpteenth crisis between the Kurds and Arabs. The peshmerga had come down south of the Green Line to surround the

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