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Iraqi Security Forces
A Strategy for Success
Iraqi Security Forces
A Strategy for Success
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Description
This volume documents both the initial mistakes and the changes in U.S. policy that now offer real hope of success in Iraq. Although the United States understood neither the strategic situation in Iraq, nor the value of Iraqi military, security, and police forces in fighting the growing insurgency, the country undertook a series of policy changes in June 2004 that may well correct these mistakes and create the kind of Iraqi forces that are vital to both Iraq's future and any successful reduction in Coalition forces and eventual withdrawal from Iraq.
In this book, Cordesman sets a number of U.S. policy priorities that must be attained if Iraqi forces are to be created at anything like the levels of strength and competence that are required. He is convinced that pursuing the right program consistently and with the right resources may well succeed in solving the security aspects of the nation-building problem in Iraq. The history of U.S. efforts to create Iraqi forces is a warning that Americans at every level need to think about what alliance and cooperation mean in creating allied forces for this kind of nation building and warfare. Iraq is only one example of how vital a role such forces must play in many forms of asymmetric warfare. What is equally clear is that Americans must understand that they have a moral and ethical responsibility to the forces they are creating.
Table of Contents
Initial Failures in Grand Strategy and Strategic Assessment: The Background to the Effort to Create Effective Iraqi Security Forces
The Growth and Character of the Insurgent Threat
US Training and Equipment Effort: The Failures of 2003
Failing to Deliver an Adequate Training and Equipment Program Through the Tenure of the CPA and Mid-2004
The Fall of 2004: The Effort to Train Iraqi Military, Security, and Police Forces Gathers Momentum
The Status of Iraqi Forces in November 2004
End of 2004 As A Benchmark: Iraqi Security and Military Forces in December 2004
The Run Up to Elections: Iraqi Security and Military Forces in January 2005
Iraqi Military and Security Forces in the Spring of 2005
The Iraqi View: Emerging Iraqi Forces
The Evolving Nature of the Insurgency
Building the Future
Appendix
Chronology of Events Involving Iraqi Security Forces
Product details
Published | 30 Nov 2005 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 440 |
ISBN | 9780275989088 |
Imprint | Praeger |
Dimensions | 235 x 156 mm |
Series | Praeger Security International |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Cordesman, who holds the Burke Chair in Strategy at the bipartisan Center for Strategic and International Studies, has produced an analysis of the Iraq war that is well written, thoroughly researched, and objective. The volume describes a rush to war without committing enough military forces, a failure to assess the nature and size of the Iraqi insurgency, and, perhaps most importantly, the failure to react to the wartime collapse of Iraqi military, security, and police forces. The rush to transfer sovereignty brought new problems; an election does not necessarily create a sovereign government, or even a true democracy. In the author's analysis, the US set the stage for a civil war by not adequately recruiting, training, and equipping police and national guard forces. Cordesman has provided a textbook for this and future administrations on how not to conduct a war and occupation; it includes a helpful chronology of events. This work should be required reading for professionals in the field and anyone concerned about the lack of progress in Iraq. Essential. General readers, lower-division undergraduates through practitioners.
Choice
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Author, radio commentator, and sometime US government agent, Cordesman argues that the US must construct Iraqi military, security, and police forces as an essential element of nation-building and stability, and presents a program for doing so. Most of the book is analysis of the planning and execution of the 2003 US invasion of Iraq and the subsequent occupation and resistance to it. Then he looks at The Iraqi View, the evolving nature of the conflict and the risk of sectarian and ethnic conflict, before laying out his own ideas in the final chapter.
Reference & Research Book News
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Iraqi Security Forces: A Strategy for Success chronicles the initial mistakes and changes of US policy with respect to the creation and training of a competent Iraqi security apparatus. Cordesman highlights the policy changes intiated in June 2004, which aimed to correct these past mistakes and to pave the way for the reduction and eventual withdrawal of Coalition forces from Iraq. The author sets out a number of US policy prescriptions that he believes, if applied consistently and with the necessary resouces, could help to stabilize Iraq.
Middle East Journal

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