Former Secretary of State Colin Powell said America losing war

by Karen DeYoung Tuesday, Dec. 19, 2006 at 8:53 AM

the United States is losing the "civil war" in Iraq

Powell: America losing war

Ex-secretary of State says troop increase not solution, favors security handover

WASHINGTON - Former Secretary of State Colin Powell said Sunday that the United States is losing what he described as a "civil war" in Iraq and that he is not convinced that an increase in troops there would reverse the situation.

Instead, he called for a new strategy that would relinquish responsibility for Iraqi security to the government in Baghdad sooner rather than later, with a U.S. drawdown to begin by the middle of next year.

Powell's comments broke his long public silence on the issue and placed him at odds with the administration.

President Bush is considering options for a new military strategy, among them a "surge" of 15,000 to 30,000 troops added to the 140,000 in Iraq, to secure Baghdad and to accelerate the training of Iraqi forces, as Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and others have proposed; or a redirection of the U.S. military away from the insurgency to focus mainly on hunting al-Qaida terrorists, as the nation's top military leaders proposed last week in a meeting with the president.

Meanwhile, incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said on ABC's This Week that he could back a brief increase in forces if "it's part of a program to get us out of there."

But Bush has rejected the dire conclusions of the Iraq Study Group and its recommendations to set parameters for a phased withdrawal to begin next year, and he has insisted that the violence in Iraq is not a civil war.

"I agree with the assessment of Mr. Baker and Mr. Hamilton," Powell said, referring to the study group's leaders, former Secretary of State James Baker III and former Indiana Congressman Lee Hamilton.

The situation in Iraq is "grave and deteriorating, and we're not winning, we are losing. We haven't lost. And this is the time, now, to start to put in place the kinds of strategies that will turn this situation around."

Speaking on CBS' Face the Nation, Powell seemed to draw as much from his 35-year Army career, including four years as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, as from his more recent and difficult tenure as Bush's chief diplomat.

The summer's surge of troops to try to stabilize Baghdad failed, he said, and a new attempt is unlikely to succeed.

"If somebody proposes that additional troops be sent, if I was still chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, my first question . . . is what mission is it these troops are supposed to accomplish? . . . Is it something that is really accomplishable? . . . Do we have enough troops to accomplish it?"

Although he said he agreed with Gen. John Abizaid, the top U.S. commander in the Middle East, that there should be an increase in U.S. advisers to the Iraqi military, he said that "sooner or later you have to begin the baton pass, passing it off to the Iraqis for their security and to begin the drawdown of U.S. forces. I think that's got to happen sometime before the middle of next year."

Before any decision to increase troops, he said, "I'd want to have a clear understanding of what it is they're going for, how long they're going for. And let's be clear about something else. . . . There really are no additional troops. All we would be doing is keeping some of the troops who were there, there longer and escalating or accelerating the arrival of other troops."

He added, "That's how you surge. And that surge cannot be sustained."

The "active Army is about broken," Powell said.

USA Today contributed to this article.