But the missions [in Iraq] will hardly change. Instead the military will call them stability operations. And they will inevitably involve – in addition to advising and training Iraqi forces and providing security for Provincial Reconstruction Teams – fighting insurgents, and probably more American troop deaths.
(A brief aside: in late-April I spent a night with a young sergeant, Staff Sgt. Amilcar H. Gonzalez, in Ash Shura, a restive village south of Mosul, on an overlook position watching a roadway. He was 26 and on his fourth tour in Iraq, and spoke about how he liked the structure of the Army and planned to make it a career. About three weeks later, Sergeant Gonzalez was killed by small arms fire in the same village. The soldiers there called it a combat operation, but it will be called a stability operation after August, a mission justified by the provision that allows for self-defense, or force protection, in the security agreement that binds Iraq and the United States.)
By: Brant
If I was there, it would feel like armed welfare.
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