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Some longtime Iraq observers worry that the country's sectarian divisions could widen in the months ahead. "Much of the violence has occurred because there is no government, because nobody knows what the future is," said Anthony Cordesman, a military analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who has periodically advised top U.S. commanders in Baghdad. However, military officials say that neither Iraqi political turmoil nor the continuing violence will change the departure plan. Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, visited Iraq last week and came away confident that the switch to a fully advisory role can occur as planned, his spokesman said Monday. Also, Cordesman said that if the Obama administration were to extend the combat mission beyond Aug. 31 or seek to renegotiate the December 2011 withdrawal, the U.S. would be seen by many Iraqis as reverting to the role of an occupier. At the same time Obama has drawn down forces in Iraq, he has increased the U.S. commitment in Afghanistan, ordering a surge of 30,000 additional troops for the 9-year mission there. Casualties are on the rise, causing some to argue the Afghanistan war should be ended quickly but others to question Obama's plan to begin winding it down as soon as next July. Critics say such a timetable will embolden the Taliban and other extremist groups in the region. With debate continuing and war support low, the White House has launched a fresh effort to paint the U.S. goals in Afghanistan as modest: keeping the region from being a haven for terrorists. "We face huge challenges in Afghanistan," Obama said Monday. "But it's important that the American people know that we are making progress and we're focused on goals that are clear and achievable." The United States lost four troops in Iraq last month, and only one of those was in combat. July was the deadliest month of the war in Afghanistan, with 66 U.S. troops killed. Speaking before a mostly friendly crowd of more than 2,500 disabled veterans, some in wheelchairs, others with lost limbs, Obama promised an all-out effort to support the nation's troops. "Your country is going to take care of you when you come home," he said. After the speech, he headlined a lunch to raise campaign cash for the Democratic National Committee, his latest stop in a summer fundraising sprint that also includes events in Chicago later this week.
[Associated
Press;
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