Iraq Study Group report says situation in the country is grave
Washington: The United States should begin to withdraw forces from combat and launch a diplomatic push, including Iran and Syria, to prevent "a slide toward chaos" in Iraq, an elite panel recommended yesterday.
The Iraq Study Group, co-chaired by James A. Baker III, former US secretary of state, also urged Washington to reduce its political, military or economic support if Iraq's government fails to advance security and reconciliation in the country, where sectarian violence kills scores every day.
The influential, bipartisan group offered a pessimistic assessment of circumstances in Iraq and painted a nightmare scenario of rampant violence and spreading unrest across the region if the United States fails to stabilise the country.
Among its unanimous recommendations, the group called for the White House to overcome its resistance to dealing directly with Iran and Syria, whom US officials accuse of fomenting the Iraqi insurgency, and to press for a "comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace" to settle that festering conflict.
US President George W. Bush said he would take the much-anticipated report "very seriously" after he met the group but the White House has made clear he will not be bound by its ideas and has begun its own review of Iraq policy.
"The situation in Iraq is grave and deteriorating," the five Republicans and five Democrats in the group said of the war, in which more than 2,900 US troops have died. "There is no magic formula to solve the problems."
The group called for the diplomatic push to begin by the end of the year and recommended the US military strengthen its effort to train Iraqi forces by increasing the number of US forces engaged in such work to 20,000 from about 4,000. "The primary mission of US forces in Iraq should evolve to one of supporting the Iraqi army, which would take over primary responsibility for combat," it added.