New Strategy in Iraq

February 23, 2007 • Volume 17, Issue 8
Will President Bush's troop surge work?
By Peter Katel

Introduction

Emotion overcomes an Iraqi woman after a bomb planted under a car in Baghdad killed at least 12 people waiting to buy kerosene on Dec. 28, 2006.  (AP Photo/Samir Mizban)
Emotion overcomes an Iraqi woman after a bomb planted under a car in Baghdad killed at least 12 people waiting to buy kerosene on Dec. 28, 2006. (AP Photo/Samir Mizban)

Calling the situation in Iraq “unacceptable,” President George W. Bush announced on Jan. 10 he was sending 21,500 additional U.S. forces as part of a new strategy to turn the war around. The so-called surge follows an especially grim year in Iraq: 823 U.S. troops and an estimated 28,000 Iraqi civilians were killed in 2006, reflecting stepped-up attacks by Sunni insurgents and Shiite death squads. In November, with the U.S. military death toll approaching 3,000, American voters signaled their disenchantment with the war by overturning Republican control of Congress. After taking the congressional reins, Democrats struggled to show their disapproval of the troop buildup without cutting off funds for the troops. And a blue-ribbon, bipartisan commission urged the president to negotiate with neighboring Iran and Syria to head off a regional conflict. Meanwhile, many experts doubt the Iraqi government can meet new benchmarks for progress set by the United States.

ISSUE TRACKER for Related Reports
Iraq
Mar. 01, 2013  The Iraq War: 10 Years Later
Apr. 25, 2008  Cost of the Iraq War
Feb. 23, 2007  New Strategy in Iraq
Oct. 21, 2005  War in Iraq
Jul. 25, 2003  Rebuilding Iraq
Oct. 04, 2002  Confronting Iraq
Mar. 15, 1991  Calculating the Cost of the Gulf War
Nov. 16, 1990  Iraq and Beyond: Post-Cold War Military Choices
Aug. 22, 1980  Iraq's New Image
BROWSE RELATED TOPICS:
Iraq War
Regional Political Affairs: Middle East and South Asia
U.S. at War: Iraq