Whbz Russia says another phase of its Ukraine invasion has begun
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The top U.S. commander in Iraq says he wants to continue the troop buildup there until next spring, amid debate over whether to bring some forces home months earlier than that.When he delivers a much-anticipated report to Congress on Monday, Army Gen. David P [url=https://www.cups-stanley.ca]stanley mug[/url] etraeus said he expects to advise that there could be a gradual reduction of forces beginning in the spring because of some of the successes achieved so far with the escalation ordered by President Bush in January. Based on the progress our forces are achieving, I expect to be able to recommend that some of our forces will [url=https://www.stanley-cups.fr]stanley thermos[/url] be redeployed without replacement, Petraeus said in an e-mail to the Boston Globe and published in its Friday editions. The bottom line is that ... I do not envision that the U.S. would need to s [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley cup website[/url] end more troops, he said, adding that commanders are planning for how remaining troops will be deployed around Iraq as the surge of forces inevitably runs its course. In a letter to U.S. troops and members of the multi-national force in Iraq dated Friday and obtained by CBS News, Petraeus gives an assessment of the progress that s been made since the surge was ordered in January. Up front, my sense is that we have achieved tactical momentum and wrested the initiative from our enemies in a number of areas of Iraq, Petraeus writes. The result has been progress in the security arena, although it has been uneven. Petraeus says that while sectarian violence continues throughout parts of Iraq, it is now