|
US Commander General Mixon Asks for
More Troops Diyala Iraq
By Meredith Buel
11 May 2007
The U.S. commander in northern Iraq says he does not have enough
manpower to secure the increasingly violent Diyala province. Major
General Benjamin Mixon made the remarks to reporters at the Pentagon by
videoconference from Iraq.
General Mixon commands the area of Iraq that includes Diyala province,
northeast of Baghdad.
Diyala is a large, ethnically mixed region that has experienced some of
the worst violence since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
Mixon says the province is a focus for al-Qaida terrorists and contains
a large number of Sunni insurgents that receive support from the local
population.
The general says he needs more troops to secure the area.
Maj. Gen. Benjamin
Mixon (l) and U.S. Army Col. Trogdon speak with Pentagon reporters via
satellite, providing an update on ongoing security operations in Iraq, 9
Mar 2007
"I do not have enough
soldiers right now in Diyala province to get that security situation
moving," he said. "We have plans to put additional forces in that area.
I can't discuss the details of that. We have put additional forces in
there over the last couple of months, but I am going to need additional
forces in Diyala province to get that situation to a more acceptable
level so the Iraqi security forces will be able in the future to handle
that."
The general says he currently has about 3,500 U.S. troops in Diyala
province, with about 10,000 Iraqi soldiers and several thousand Iraqi
police.
Mixon says Diyala's government is so ineffective at providing services
that it could be described as nonfunctioning.
The general says ministries in Baghdad are to blame because they are to
slow to provide support to provincial governors and Iraqi security
services.
"After nearly eight months on the ground I am concerned about the
overall progress of our Iraqi security forces and the governmental
processes," he added. "Progress is being made in selected areas,
although slow. At times we have episodic setbacks and unnecessary
roadblocks to security and governance, but we continue to move forward."
President
Bush has ordered nearly 30,000 additional troops to Iraq, primarily to
help calm sectarian violence in Baghdad.
General Mixon says insurgents, facing the crackdown in the Iraqi
capital, have migrated to Diyala and other provinces.
The general says providing security and improving local government
services are critical components for defeating the insurgency.
"The most important and difficult task we have is to improve the Iraqi
government capacity, particularly at the provincial level," he
explained. "That will lead the people to have confidence in their
government. The confidence of the people in that government will enhance
our security operations and enable us to ultimately defeat this enemy."
General Mixon says showing Iraqis that their government can provide for
them "will be the most powerful weapon against the insurgency." |