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In 2006 Panetta served alongside Gates on the Iraq Study Group, where he revealed himself to be a skeptic of the war. He urged a U.S. strategy that would bring combat forces out of Iraq and redirect the military's efforts to focus on al-Qaida and training Iraqi security forces. He later called the war "divisive, unstable and dangerous." On his watch later this year, Panetta may face an Iraqi government request that some of the roughly 47,000 U.S. forces still in the country stay beyond the end of this year, when all U.S. troops are supposed to go home. Erudite, gregarious and a savvy political operator, Panetta began his public life as a Republican. He served in the Nixon administration as a special assistant to the secretary of Health, Education and Welfare and as director of the U.S. Office of Civil Rights. He switched to the Democratic Party in the 1970s and was first elected to the House in 1976. Panetta was born in Monterey, Calif., and earned a bachelor of arts degree in political science and a law degree, both from Santa Clara University. He served in the Army as an intelligence officer from 1964 to 1966. In his farewell speech on the Pentagon's ceremonial parade ground Thursday, Gates joked that Panetta should take a lesson from Gates' example as a former CIA director who arrived at the Pentagon expecting a short tenure. "My parting advice for Leon," Gates said, "is to get his office just the way he likes it. He may be here longer than he thinks."
[Associated
Press;
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