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Troops from the US army's 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team head into Baghdad to scout out a mainly Shiite slum area near Sadr City, bastion to the Mahdi Army militia on Oct. 3, 2006. The mission would be marred by the death of one of the soldiers, killed by a sniper after the troops visited a school.
DAVE CLARK/AFP/Getty Images
Despite President Barack Obama's declaration
Tuesday of an end to the combat mission in Iraq, combat almost
certainly lies ahead.
And in asserting the U.S. has met its responsibilities in Iraq,
the president opened the door wide to a debate about the meaning of
success in the muddle that most - but not all - American troops are
leaving behind.
A look at some of the statements Obama made in his Oval Office
speech and how they compare with the facts:
OBAMA: "Tonight, I am announcing that the American combat
mission in Iraq has ended."
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THE FACTS: Peril remains for the tens of thousands of U.S.
troops still in Iraq, who are likely if not certain to engage
violent foes. Counterterrorism is chief among their continuing
missions, pitting them against a lethal enemy.
Several thousand
special operations forces, including Army Green Berets and Navy
SEALs, will continue to hunt and attempt to kill al-Qaida and other
terrorist fighters - working closely with Iraqi forces. Obama said,
"Of course, violence will not end with our combat mission," while
stopping short of a full accounting of the hazards ahead for U.S.
troops.
---
OBAMA: "We have met our responsibility."
THE FACTS: That depends entirely on how the U.S. responsibility
is defined.
Sectarian division - the danger that Obama said as a
presidential candidate had to be addressed before Iraq could
succeed - continues to deprive the country of a fully functioning
government. U.S. goals for reconstruction are unmet. And although
the U.S. says Iraqi forces can handle the insurgency largely on
their own, Iraq is expected to need U.S. air power and other
military support for years to control its own air space and to
deter a possible attack by a neighboring state.
It was the U.S. that invaded Iraq, overthrew its government,
disbanded its security forces and failed in the early phases of the
conflict to understand the depth of Iraq's sectarian and ethnic
divisions and its political paralysis. The U.S. in some minds is
responsible for putting Iraq back together again, yet today Iraq
has no permanent government and its security forces arguably are
not fully prepared to defend the country's skies and borders.
In inheriting a war he opposed from the start, Obama did not
accept U.S. responsibilities so broadly.
It will take time to see if his more limited view of success
bears out. In May, he said: "This is what success looks like: an
Iraq that provides no haven to terrorists; a democratic Iraq that
is sovereign and stable and self-reliant."
Al-Qaida terrorists are "not gone" from Iraq, Defense
Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday. But he hailed "an important
victory against transnational terror" because "al-Qaida in Iraq
has been largely cut from its masters abroad."
---
OBAMA: "Unfortunately, over the last decade, we have not done
what is necessary to shore up the foundation of our own prosperity.
We have spent over a trillion dollars at war, often financed by
borrowing from overseas. This, in turn, has shortchanged
investments in our own people, and contributed to record
deficits."
THE FACTS: This is partly true. For sure, the costly Iraq and
Afghanistan wars have contributed to the nation's budget deficit -
but not by as much as Obama suggests. The current annual deficit is
now an estimated $1.5 trillion. But as recently as 2007, the budget
deficit was just $161.5 billion. And that was years after war
expenses were in place for both the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts.
Most of the current deficit is due to the longest recession
since the 1930s. It has seriously depressed tax revenues while
increasing costs to the government - including social safety-net
programs such as unemployment insurance and spending by both the
outgoing Bush and incoming Obama administrations on stimulus
programs and on bailouts of banks and automakers.
---
OBAMA: "This was my pledge to the American people as a
candidate for this office."
THE FACTS: At one stage of the presidential campaign, Obama
spoke of an earlier departure of troops than he ultimately
achieved. "I have put forward a plan that will get our troops out
by the end of 2009," he said in a January 2008 Democratic
candidates debate. But his pledge for most of the campaign was to
withdraw combat troops within 16 months, a promise kept.
(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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Troops from the US army's 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team head into Baghdad to scout out a mainly Shiite slum area near Sadr City, bastion to the Mahdi Army militia on Oct. 3, 2006. The mission would be marred by the death of one of the soldiers, killed by a sniper after the troops visited a school.
DAVE CLARK/AFP/Getty Images
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