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Petraeus Ends Command
Tour in Iraq
By Al Pessin
17 September 2008
The coalition commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, has left his
post after a momentous year and a half, during which he is widely
credited with turning around the fight against a variety of insurgent
groups. He will now become the overall commander of U.S. forces in the
Middle East and Central Asia. Al Pessin reports from Baghdad.
After
receiving the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, one of the military's
highest awards, outgoing Multinational Force Iraq Commanding General
David H. Petraeus thanks Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates.
At a ceremony crowded with senior military officers and ordinary
soldiers, in one of Saddam Hussein's old palaces, the new commander,
General Ray Odierno took command of 146,000 U.S. troops, and thousands
of coalition elements, plus the job of training Iraqi's new forces and
coordinating operations with them.
"Where chaos reigned, hope now prevails, and there is a growing belief
in a bright and prosperous future here in this ancient land," Odierno
said. "Under the exceptional leadership of General Petraeus, the men and
women of Multinational Force, Iraq, along with our brave Iraqi partners,
have created this hope, and you should be tremendously proud of all
you've accomplished. However, we must realize that these gains are
fragile and reversible, and our work here is far from done."
General Odierno was General Petraeus' deputy until earlier this year.
Petraeus spoke about what has been done in Iraq during his tenure, and
about the work that lies ahead.
"Above all to our troopers, thank you for your courage, determination,
commitment, sacrifice and skill," Petraeus said. "Indeed, you and our
Iraqi partners stemmed the tide of violence and helped this country step
back from the brink of civil war. Clearly, innumerable challenges
confront the new Iraq, and much hard work lies ahead. But the progress
you and our Iraqi partners have achieved has been of enormous
importance."
Defense Secretary Robert Gates and other officials flew all the way from
Washington to attend the change of command. "When
General Petraeus took charge 19 months ago, darkness had descended on
this land," Gates said. "Death was commonplace. Around the world,
questions mounted whether a new strategy, or any strategy for that
matter, could make a real difference. Slowly, but inexorably, the tide
began to turn. Our enemies took a fearsome beating they will not soon
forget. The situation here is much different today."
Secretary Gates says General Odierno's job will be somewhat different
from his predecessor's. While General Petraeus had to turn the course of
a conflict seemingly spinning out of control, the secretary says General
Odierno now needs to consolidate stability, further increase the
training of the Iraqi forces and speed the process of handing them
control of their own country. Senior military officers warn not to go
too fast and risk repeating the setbacks of two years ago, but they also
make clear, as do U.S. and Iraqi politicians, that that is the direction
they are going.
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