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"Is it enough? Not yet," Cartwright told a Pentagon news conference. "But it is in fact turning in a direction and accelerating at a measurable pace. It is definitely starting to have an effect." Mullen visited this plywood and canvas base near the key town of Marjah, which has served as a model for the counterinsurgency strategy Obama outlined a year ago. To carry out that plan, Obama pledged 30,000 additional U.S. troops, the first of which were the Marines sent to Helmand Province. Mullen thanked Marines, many of whom had served three or sometimes four tours in southern Afghanistan. "As difficult a fight as Marjah was initially, against sort of the expectations that were laid out there ... I think progress there has been significant," he said. It took longer to flush militants from Marjah than military planners expected, and even longer to fill crucial local government billets. The town is mostly quiet now, but militants or low-level fighters remain there, military officers in Helmand say. Mullen came away from his visit to Forward Operating Base Wilson in Kandahar Province worried about what militants flushed from the area may do when warm weather returns in the spring. Some may have taken refuge in Pakistan, although in this region it may be more likely the militants have slipped deeper into the countryside. "We have rooted out the Taliban where they have been for a long time
-- years,' Mullen said, referring to areas of Zhari Province where the base sits, and surrounding areas. "It's the first time that has happened. So the question is, where do they go and what do they do after the fact? Do they come back?"
[Associated
Press;
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