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With buildup, offensive begins

Unlike in previous Iraq operations, a U.S. commander says, forces will stay in Baghdad and nearby areas cleared of insurgents.

THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ: THE NEW U.S. STRATEGY

June 23, 2007|Peter Spiegel and Tina Susman, Times Staff Writers

WASHINGTON — The Army general in charge of day-to-day operations in Iraq said Friday that with all combat troops deployed in the Bush administration's buildup now in place, the U.S. military would push more forcefully to root out insurgents in and around Baghdad.

Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno said the new offensive differed from previous operations in the capital. He said the additional troops would allow U.S. and Iraqi forces to occupy neighborhoods once they are cleared of insurgents and to protect civilians as the areas are rebuilt.


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"With the amount of forces that we have now, we will be able to stay in these areas ... where we've had either no or very little capability to do this previously," he said from Iraq in a video conference with reporters at the Pentagon.

Parts of the offensive have been discussed by military officials as it got underway this week.

But by formally unveiling the overall strategy Friday, Odierno differentiated it from military actions taken over the last four months. For the first time, he said, all forces in the troop buildup were taking part in a coordinated offensive throughout Iraq's midsection.

"We are beyond a surge of forces, and we are now into a surge of operations," Odierno said.

Meanwhile, the military said Friday that a U.S. soldier was killed Thursday in fighting in southwest Baghdad, bringing to 3,546 the number of American troops killed in Iraq since the war began in March 2003, according to icasualties.org, a website that tracks military deaths.

The offensive, which is to run through the summer, includes the move of 10,000 U.S. troops into the province of Diyala and its capital, Baqubah, northeast of Baghdad. Violence has risen in Diyala as insurgents have poured in, fleeing the U.S. military in Baghdad and Al Anbar province in the west.

Odierno said the operation involves all 20 brigades deployed in Iraq, including five brigades -- about 17,500 troops -- in Baghdad and at least that many ringing the capital.

Since President Bush announced his new security plan in January, U.S. defense officials have insisted that any attempt to evaluate the buildup's effectiveness was premature, because the five additional combat brigades ordered to Iraq would take months to arrive.

But as the troops arrived and the offensive began, Pentagon officials continued to debate how long the increased force levels would be needed.

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