Dear All,
President Barack Obama and current members of his administration often make the claim that
they had no choice but to pull all American troops out of Iraq.
However, recent polls are showing that the Citizens of America have long begun to seriously question Obama's veracity and lack of character when it comes to leveling with us.
Others
like former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and now Leon Panetta are exposing Obama for the liar he truly is and are beginning to speak out and ridicule Obama for trying to re-invent history.
Is it any wonder that Obama has not only lost faith with us Americans but the whole world; both friend and foe.
Panetta unloads on White House for pulling US forces out of Iraq
Published October
02, 2014
In this Feb. 22,
2013 photo, then U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta addresses a news
conference during a NATO meeting at the Alliance headquarters in Brussels. (Reuters)
Former Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta is lashing out at President Obama’s inner circle for
failing to secure a 2011 deal to leave U.S. troops in Iraq, effectively
accusing the White House of sabotaging the talks – in turn, opening the door
for the region to become a haven for the Islamic State.
Panetta, who served
as CIA director and then Defense secretary during those negotiations, aired his
complaints in his forthcoming memoir, “Worthy Fights.”
Excerpts on the
Baghdad talks were published by Time.
In them, Panetta
explained that Iraqi leaders privately wanted some U.S. forces to
stay behind after the formal 2011 withdrawal, though they would not
say so publicly.
The former
secretary, though, said the U.S. had “leverage” to
strike a deal, and the Defense and State departments tried to do
exactly that.
“But,” he wrote, “the President’s team at the White House pushed back, and the
differences occasionally became heated. … and those on our side
viewed the White House as so eager to rid itself of Iraq that it was willing to
withdraw rather than lock in arrangements that would preserve our influence and
interests.”
He said the
negotiations with then-Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki went down to the wire in
December 2011, but the White House never
stepped up.
“To my frustration,
the White House coordinated the negotiations but never really led them,”
Panetta charged.
“Officials there
seemed content to endorse an agreement if State and Defense could reach one,
but without the President’s active advocacy, al-Maliki was allowed to slip
away.”
The account from
Panetta challenges the notion that the Obama administration would have left
some troops behind – as U.S. military advisers wanted – if only the Iraqi
government had been more willing to negotiate.
While Panetta lays
some blame at the feet of the Iraqis, he also argues that the White House never
seized the chance at a deal.
Panetta claims that
a residual troop presence like he and others had advocated could have made the
difference.
“To this day, I
believe that a small U.S. troop presence in Iraq could have effectively advised
the Iraqi military on how to deal with al-Qaeda’s resurgence and the sectarian
violence that has engulfed the country,” he wrote.
Panetta also warned
that the rise of the Islamic State “greatly increases the risk that Iraq will
become al-Qaeda’s next safe haven.”
Gen. John Campbell,
commander of the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, was
asked Thursday about Panetta’s comments, but said “we absolutely left [the
Iraqis] in the best possible condition militarily that we could.”
He put to onus on
the Iraqi government.
“Things that were
done by the government did not bring all the different factions in Iraq
together was not something that … the U.S. military could have done or changed
once we left there in 2011,” he said.
Asked again whether
leaving a force in Iraq could have helped, he said: “I think any military guy
is going to tell you if you could leave a force, you'd always leave a
force.”
Sens. John McCain,
R-Ariz., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., though, seized on Panetta's comments -- as
well as similar remarks by former Iraq Ambassador Ryan Crocker that
the U.S. "could have gotten that agreement" if officials had been
more persistent.
"The latest
statements by two of the most respected national security officials to serve
under President Obama definitively refute the falsehood that this
Administration has told the American people for years about their efforts to
leave a residual force in Iraq," the senators said in a statement.
"As we have
said all along ... the Obama Administration never made a full effort to leave a
residual force in Iraq."
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