| Rumsfeld taps 92,000 GIs for Iraq rotation(AP)
 Updated: 2005-11-08 23:46
 
 The Pentagon announced Monday that more than 92,000 troops will be in the 
next rotation of U.S. forces in Iraq, and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld 
said its exact size will not be decided until after the Dec. 15 election of a 
new Iraqi government.  
 
 
 
 |  In this picture released by the US Forces 
 Monday, Nov. 7, 2005, US Soldiers of the 1/10th Mountain Divisions 2nd 
 Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment unfold barbed wire as they assist Iraqi 
 Army in a hand out of food supplies in Abu Ghraib, Iraq, Wednesday, Nov.2, 
 2005. U.S. and Iraqi troops battled insurgents house-to-house on Monday, 
 the third day of an assault against al-Qaida-led insurgents in a town near 
 the Syrian border. The U.S. command reported the first American death in 
 the operation. [AP]
 |  
 
 The Pentagon said it has identified some of the major combat units that will 
deploy, starting in mid-2006 as part of a rotation that will run through 
mid-2008, including a National Guard brigade from Minnesota. 
 It said the identified units will total about 92,000 troops, but Rumsfeld 
said that should not be taken as the final figure. The usual troop level this 
year has been about 138,000, although that has been strengthened to about 
160,000 this fall out of concern for extra violence during voting in October and 
December. 
 The number of troops in future rotations will depend on conditions, including 
the severity of the insurgency and the strength of Iraqi security forces, as 
well as the recommendations of U.S. commanders, Rumsfeld said. 
 "We know we're going to bulk up for the elections, and we know we're going to 
go back down to some level after the elections," Rumsfeld said in a telephone 
call to The Associated Press. During the call, Rumsfeld complained that an AP 
report gave the mistaken impression that the Pentagon has already decided to 
reduce troop levels below 138,000 next year. 
 Separately, a senior Army general said there is a growing momentum in the 
training of Iraqi security forces, which now total about 100,000 army soldiers 
and about 111,000 police forces. In a detailed briefing before a group organized 
by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank, Lt. Gen. 
David Petraeus said the goal is to have a combined total of 230,000 army and 
police by the December election. 
 Petraeus left Iraq last summer after a year in command of training programs 
for the Iraqi security forces. His briefing charts said training and equipping 
of the Iraqi army should be done by January 2007, and by March 2007 for the 
Iraqi police services. The total number of forces is to reach 325,000 by July 
2007. 
 The Pentagon hopes to be able to reduce U.S. troop levels as Iraqi security 
forces become more capable of defending their own country, but it is unclear 
when that point will be reached. 
 Officials also disclosed that U.S. commanders in Iraq 
decided they would not need one brigade — normally numbering about 3,500 
soldiers, until early next year. It had been scheduled to deploy to Iraq before 
the Dec. 15 election. That unit, the 1st Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, based 
at Fort Riley, Kan., will deploy after the election instead. 
 
 
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