Washington, DC – Subcommittee Chairman Martin Meehan
and Ranking Member Todd Akin of the Oversight and
Investigations Subcommittee of the House Armed Services
Committee released the following joint statement following
today’s subcommittee hearing on the development of
the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF):
“When the dust settles in Iraq, historians and scholars
will not ask how many Iraqis we trained and equipped; they will
ask whether we left behind an effective government with a
capable force to secure the Iraqi people. Over the past
several months, the Subcommittee on Oversight and
Investigations has held nine briefings and hearings on the
development of the Iraqi Security Forces for a detailed
examination of this effort. Today’s hearing serves
as the capstone for our work.
“While useful in many ways, this hearing reflected the
difficulties we have experienced over the course of this
investigation. We have heard many times now about the
numbers of Iraqis trained and equipped, which supposedly
represents ‘progress’ toward an Iraq that is less
reliant on U.S. forces to provide security. Today’s
witness, Lieutenant General Martin Dempsey, who has just
returned from his tour as the Commander of the Multi-National
Security Transition Command – Iraq, was certainly well
positioned to speak about the training portion of the
mission. Unfortunately, we were unable to hear from one of
the commanders who oversees the operations of the Iraqi
Security Forces. This would have allowed us to gain
insight into the Iraqis’ performance in the
field.
“This is the critical element of our work. It is the
combat effectiveness of the Iraqi Army that will allow them to
undertake a greater share of the fight against the insurgency
in Iraq, not the number of soldiers we train. Likewise, it
is the competence and trustworthiness of the Iraqi Police that
will lead to the restoration of normalcy on Iraq’s
volatile streets, not how many weapons we have purchased and
provided for them.
“We
sincerely hope that the Department of Defense will begin to do
a better job of relating to Congress and the American people
how things are going on the ground in Iraq, and how the Iraqis
are performing. We must work together to ensure that the
U.S. is doing everything it can to improve the ISF and achieve
a prompt and effective transition of security responsibility to
the Iraqis. By the end of June, the Oversight and
Investigations Subcommittee will complete its report on the
development of the Iraqi Security Forces to this point, which
we hope will contribute to public debate and help improve our
policy.”
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