WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (UPI) -- Watching them drive by at 30 mph would take 75 days. Bumper-to-bumper, they would stretch from
Even in an emergency, Col. Richoux said in Defense News, the evacuation of 162,000 troops in 23 ground combat brigades and millions of tons of equipment would take some 20 months. Military shipping containers, end to end, would stretch from
The main resupply route for convoys that runs 344 miles from
According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, the military has some 300,000 "heavy" items that would have to be shipped back, such as ice-cream machines that churn out different flavors upon request at a dozen bases throughout the California-sized country. And before it can be loaded onto ships, equipment has to be scrubbed clean to conform to U.S. Department of Agriculture regulations. The
Clearly any major withdrawal from
MSC cargo ships make regular runs to
The constant movement of some 100 freighters and thousands of railroad cars has cost almost $30 billion. After a year of use in
Gone are the conventional wars when troops could periodically pull back from clearly defined battle lines. The insurgency's tactics mean soldiers are on alert 24/7 and have to be rotated home at the end of a year for a year of less dangerous training before returning to combat duty in
Unit commanders begin working with logistics planners for redeployment as soon as they rotate to home base. Heavy equipment used to leave base on railroad cars to be loaded at ports a month before troops were flown out to
In Congress, those arguing for a rapid, precipitous withdrawal are butting heads with those who favor an extended redeployment over several years as a means to "stay the course" in the interim. Logistics seem to favor the latter. They make the case for staying by cherry-picking logistical impediments. Opponents argue a massive redeployment of
Lawrence J. Korb, a former assistant secretary of defense during the Reagan defense buildup (through 1985) and director of National Security Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, argues the choice between "a swift or extended redeployment is a false dilemma" and "an orderly and safe withdrawal is best achieved over a 10- to 12-month period."
This would require what Korb and his team of co-authors (Max A. Bergmann, Sean E. Duggan and Peter M. Juul) call an "invasion in reverse." "If orders were given to pull back to
A startling new development in Iraq, such as the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Sistani, Shiite Iraq's senior cleric, "or a large sectarian attack leading to all-out civil war could well compel our forces to withdraw in as little as three months," Korb and his team wrote last month in a report released by the Center for American Progress. Those who say withdrawal will take several years "base their analysis on the time it takes to complete a meticulous extraction and dismantling of all
The authors' report detailed how the Pentagon was able to organize the rotation of nearly 235,000 soldiers and all their equipment in the spring of 2004 in and out of
To maintain an offensive and deterrent capability in the region, the "Korbists" recommend temporarily stationing some 10,000 troops (two brigades plus support and command) in the Kurdish north for an extra year to prevent the outbreak of Turkish-Kurd violence, as well as Marine units tasked with security at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and another ground brigade and tactical air wing based in Kuwait. The new lineup would include a carrier battle group and a Marine expeditionary force in the
"The time for half-measures and experiments is over," they argue. Now's the time "for a logistically sound strategic redeployment." Ignored was how the possible bombing of
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