New U.S. Trainer of Iraqi Forces Takes Over

Officials hope Iraq security will control most provinces by end of the year.

ByABC News
June 10, 2007, 7:59 PM

BAGHDAD, June 10, 2007 — -- Lt. Gen. James Dubik became the top American trainer of Iraqi forces today, assuming control of the Multi-National Security Training Command-Iraq at perhaps the most critical time in the four-year-old war.

In a symbolic nod toward the day when the command might be taken over by an Iraqi commander, Dubik addressed a crowd in Arabic, including such senior U.S. and Iraqi military brass as Adm. William Fallon, the head of the U.S. Central Command, who flew in for the ceremony, and Gen. David Petraeus, the top commander in Iraq.

Without mentioning growing congressional and public impatience at home with the pace of the war, Dubik's predecessor, outgoing commander Lt. Gen. Martin Dempsey, called the upcoming period a key time in training Iraqi troops to assume the leading security role in their country.

"There is no more important moment in Iraq than the development of Iraq security forces, security forces that will protect the people and preserve their new freedoms," Dempsey said. "We must stand together. There is no other way to honor those who have been killed."

By year end, U.S. commanders say Iraqi security forces should be able to take over control of 14 of Iraq's 18 provinces, though they will continue to require the reinforcement and training of American troops. The other four provinces Baghdad, Diyala, Saladdin and Anbar are strongholds of the Sunni Muslim insurgency.

Petraeus told ABC News that there are hopeful signs in Anbar province, where several Sunni tribes recently split with al Qaeda and joined Iraq's security forces by the hundreds.

"If you look at what transformed Anbar province, it was sort of political. I mean, it was really a statement by the tribes, physically, that they were going to oppose al Qaeda," Petraeus said. "There need to be similar statements among the different groupings of Iraqi society. That's really what our soldiers and the Iraqi soldiers are fighting for, is to provide the Iraqi authorities this opportunity to keep the level of sectarian violence down."