Bush hails troop cuts as 'return on success' in Iraq

But his speech Thursday ignores failure of Iraqi political reconciliation, critics say.

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Yet Kupchan and other critics of the president's handling of Iraq say they fear Bush's trumpeting of the tactical successes of the surge is just one more in a line of events the administration has used to claim a corner has been turned in the Iraq war."This is another in a series of points where significantly positive developments are claimed as a way of extending the policy into the future," Kupchan says.

That line of "pivotal moments" includes the capture of Sadddam Hussein, the capture and killing of his sons Uday and Qusay, the approval in a referendum of a new Iraqi constitution, national elections resulting in the current parliament, the killing of Al Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and now the switching of Sunni tribal cooperationin Anbar Province from Al-Qaeda-associated extremists to the US.

Yet Bush clearly felt compelled to acknowledge that nothing in Iraq is so clear-cut as "victory" or turning a corner. The president cited one piece of bad news from earlier in the day: the murder by car-bombing of leading sheik in what has been called "the Anbar awakening." Abdel-Sattar Abu Risha, who met with Bush earlier this month as head of the Anbar Awakening council, was killed just outside the Anbar capital of Ramadi when a roadside bomb struck his vehicle.

But White House officials were insisting that Thursday's speech marks a pivotal moment when military success against Al Qaeda in Iraq and in providing more security to the Iraqi people means the US will be able to begin adopting a new mission of guiding the Iraqi security forces in taking over more military operations.

"The mission over time will shift from ... our forces doing the population security to the Iraqis doing population security," says one senior administration official. "So you'll see US troops doing less of the leading in combat patrols ... and more and more enabling the Iraqis to do it themselves."

To some experts that sounds very close to the "as they stand up we'll stand down" policy that was Bush's mantra before the surge. But administration officials say the difference now is that as Iraqi security forces take over, they will maintain the surge's emphasis on localized public security.

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