This report says 3500+-, other reports say 5000.

All transfers out and short-timers hopes for home are cancelled. Most
will be moving to the front.

*The front is Bagdhad.*


US boosts Iraq troop levels amid Baghdad violence

By Will DunhamThu Jul 27, 7:32 PM ET

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on Thursday ordered about 3,500 U.S.
troops in Iraq to stay up to four months past their scheduled departure,
boosting U.S. forces in an attempt to curb unrelenting violence in Baghdad.

The move, involving the 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team from Fort
Wainwright in Alaska, is the latest sign that any significant reduction
in the size of the 130,000-strong U.S. force in Iraq is unlikely soon.

It comes after President George W. Bush said on Tuesday after meeting
visiting Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki that more U.S. and Iraqi
troops would be deployed in Baghdad from elsewhere in Iraq to confront
mounting sectarian violence.

About 100 people have died daily in attacks between Iraqi factions in
the past few weeks, raising fears of all-out civil war.

The Pentagon said Rumsfeld approved a request by Army Gen. George Casey,
the top U.S. commander in Iraq, to extend the year-long tour of the
brigade, which has operated primarily in the Mosul area in northern
Iraq, by up to 120 days.

A senior defense official said most of the brigade is expected to
operate in Baghdad, moving from relatively calm northern Iraq into a
capital beset with car bombs, suicide bombers and kidnappings. The U.S.
military is sending roughly 4,000 more troops to Baghdad.

By extending troops due to depart, the military, as it has done
periodically during the 3-year-old war, will temporarily increase the
overall size of the U.S. force by lengthening the overlap between newly
arriving units and those heading out.

FORCE LEVELS

Opinion polls show eroding U.S. public support for the war ahead of
congressional elections in November. Casey just last month expressed
confidence the military would be able to cut the size of the U.S. force
in Iraq over the rest of 2006.

"I think that no one ought to draw any conclusion as to what force
levels will exist in the months ahead from this," Rumsfeld told
reporters, saying conditions in Iraq will dictate force levels.

Rumsfeld said U.S. leaders "recognize it is a disappointment for them
(soldiers) and their families, that hoped to be coming home in the next
few weeks. ... They've done a terrific job, and we appreciate it."

The Pentagon also identified five additional Army and Marine Corps
units, each with about 3,500 troops, slated to go to Iraq in force
rotations beginning later this year. This allows for maintaining current
troop levels into early 2008, while leaving open the option of cuts,
officials said.

Pentagon policy is for Army units to serve 12-month tours in Iraq and
Marine Corps units to serve seven-month tours.

But at key times in the war -- for example, during Iraqi elections in
2005 and the return of sovereignty in 2004 -- the Pentagon has delayed
the departure of troops to beef up the American presence temporarily.

After some troops and families complained earlier in the war about lack
of predictability in the length of tours in Iraq, the Pentagon
instituted the rules on deployment duration. This was intended to reduce
emotional stress for troops serving in a hostile and unpredictable
environment.

The brigade replacing the 172nd in northern Iraq has arrived in Iraq.
About 200 soldiers from the 172nd already are back in Alaska and 200
more have reached Kuwait en route home, but Army officials said some
might have to return to Iraq.

Soldiers kept beyond a year in Iraq have received extra pay.

(Additional reporting by Vicki Allen)
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060727/pl_nm/iraq_usa_troops_dc

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