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Strategic Redeployment 2.0

Strategic Redeployment 2.0: Read the executive summary and full report here (PDF)

Six months ago the Center for American Progress issued its first report calling for a responsible exit from Iraq as part of a balanced global strategy to make Americans safer. Events since then have only underscored the need to act on our proposals.

Violence in Iraq has not only increased but also turned inward, with sectarian killings surpassing deaths from terrorist bombings and militias threatening to splinter the country. Squabbling among Iraqi leaders since national elections in December 2005 is unlikely to be resolved unless America itself adjusts to the grim realities on the ground.  

The Bush administration’s mistakes in Iraq – invading for the wrong reasons and without enough troops to secure the country – have left us with no good options. It’s understandable that a growing number of Americans are calling for an immediate withdrawal, but we believe that would only further destabilize Iraq and much of the Middle East.  Accordingly, we are calling for a comprehensive strategic redeployment from Iraq by the end of 2007 that will:

  • Restore the strength of U.S. ground troops
  • Exercise a strategic shift to meet global threats from Islamist extremists
  • Prevent U.S. troops from being caught in the middle of a civil war in Iraq
  • Avert mass sectarian and ethnic cleansing in Iraq
  • Provide time for Iraq’s elected leaders to strike a power-sharing agreement 
  • Empower Iraq’s security forces to take control
  • Get those Iraqis fighting to end the occupation to lay down their arms
  • Motivate the U.N., global, and regional powers to get more involved in Iraq
  • Give the U.S. the moral, political, and military power to deal with Iran’s attempt to develop nuclear weapons
  • Prevent an outbreak of isolationism in the United States. 

The end goals of this strategic shift are clear, but to accomplish it the United States must implement a policy of strategic redeployment that:

  • Reduces U.S. troops to 60,000 by the end of 2006 and to zero by the end of 2007, while redeploying troops to Afghanistan, Kuwait, and the Persian Gulf
  • Engages in diplomacy to resolve the conflict within Iraq by convening a Geneva peace conference modeled on the Dayton Accords
  • Establishes a Gulf Security initiative to deal with the aftermath of U.S. redeployment from Iraq and the growing nuclear capabilities of Iran
  • Puts Iraq’s reconstruction back on track with targeted international funds
  • Counters extremist Islamic ideology around the globe through long-term efforts to support the creation of democratic institutions and press freedoms.

Only after the United States has set the conditions for redeployment out of Iraq in order to engage the global strategic threats our nation faces can Americans rest assured that they will be safer. For more details on the report, please see our executive summary, the full report, and related materials gathered by the Center for American Progress elsewhere on our website.

Strategic Redeployment 2.0: Read the executive summary and full report here (PDF)

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Authors

Lawrence J. Korb

Former Senior Fellow

 (Brian Katulis)

Brian Katulis

Former Senior Fellow