IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Football and pizza point to US staying for long haul |
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by Oliver Poole news.telegraph Entered into the database on Sunday, February 12th, 2006 @ 16:04:53 MST |
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The airbase at al-Asad is the biggest marine camp in western Anbar
province. It is in the midst of the most rebellious region in Iraq, where thousands
of insurgents have been killed in a series of operations over the past year. But get "inside the wire" and this stretch of desert increasingly
resembles a slice of US suburbia rather than the front line in a war zone. Its restaurants include a Subway and a fast food pizza shop. There
is a coffee shop, football pitch and even a swimming pool. A cinema shows the latest films while the camp's main recreational
centre offers special dance nights - hip hop on Friday, salsa on Saturday and
country and western on Sunday. There is even a Hertz car rental providing saloons with bullet-proof
windows for those wanting to cross the base in something more comfortable than
a military Humvee. For as the news from Washington focuses
on troop withdrawals, the US military is beginning to implement at immense
cost the next stage in its policy for Iraq. And it is one likely to disappoint
those hoping for a quick exit of all foreign troops. Last summer reports began to emerge that plans had been drawn up to create
four "super-bases", giant camps that would house tens of thousands
of US soldiers similar to other sprawling military facilities around the world. The intention was for the newly trained and equipped Iraqi army to gradually
take over the majority of combat operations, allowing a proportion of the 138,000
US troops to depart. Those remaining would provide back-up from their new centres
of operation when requested. That hand-over has already begun with a dozen smaller bases evacuated in recent
weeks. In total 100 are scheduled to be transferred to the Iraqi government
this year. Although no official confirmation will be given of where super-bases will be
located, at al-Asad there is every impression that one is in the process of
being created. The guidelines under which reporters are allowed to visit military facilities
prohibit any mention of their location, size or number of troops. But it breaks no rules to say this is a place so extensive it has two bus routes
inside and the sight of workers constructing new billets for more troops is
common. Last month, red "Stop" signs - the ubiquitous feature of American
street furniture - went up at all road junctions. Senior members of the governing Shia parties have complained that they show
American plans for a long-term presence in their country. Sunni members of the Iraqi Islamic Party regard them as evidence of an open-ended
"occupation", a charge denied by US officials who insist the bases
are another step in an eventual withdrawal. But even the marines based at al-Asad are sceptical about how quickly that
step will be completed. The Iraqi army is considered "at least" a year from being able to
take the fight to the insurgents. Senior officers point out that when the main army base near Tikrit was handed
over to Iraqi forces, a transfer widely touted by Washington as evidence of
Iraq's growing ability to stand alone, it was looted bare within weeks by the
very Iraqi units who were meant to protect it. Above all there is the knowledge gained through grim experience that predictions
of what Iraq will be like in the immediate future are almost always wrong. Col H R McMaster, the commander of troops in Tal Afar and the US senior officer
whose counter-insurgency tactics have been singled out for praise in Washington
and London, was asked recently what he thought the next 12 months would hold
for Iraqis. He declined to speculate. "Anyone who claims to understand what is happening
in Iraq does not understand it," he answered. Servicemen, meanwhile, confidently predict that they will be rotating through
the base for at least a decade. One sergeant pointed out that at least they will be able to buy a proper cup
of coffee. |