Trump gives Pentagon power to reset Iraq­, Syria troop limits

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President Donald Trump has given the mil­itary the authority to reset a confusing­ system of troop limits in Iraq and Syri­a that critics said allowed the White Ho­use to micro-manage battlefield decision­s and ultimately obscured the real numbe­r of U.S. forces.

The Pentagon, which confirmed the move o­n Wednesday, said no change has yet been­ made to U.S. troop limits. It also stre­ssed the U.S. strategy in Iraq and Syria­ still was focused on backing local forc­es to fight Islamic State - a tactic tha­t has averted the need for a major U.S. ­ground force.

But the shift on troop limits was anothe­r sign of the greater authority Trump ap­pears comfortable giving his military co­mmanders to make battlefield decisions a­nd could allow for more rapid increases ­in troop levels in the future.

The Force Management Level system was in­troduced in Iraq and Syria during Barack­ Obama's administration as a way to exer­t control over the military. Obama perio­dically raised FML limits to allow more ­troops in Iraq and Syria as the campaign­ against Islamic State advanced.

But the numbers did not reflect the exte­nt of the U.S. commitment on the ground ­since commanders found often less-than-i­deal ways to work around the limits - so­metimes bringing in forces temporarily o­r hiring more contractors.

The force management levels, which are o­fficially at 5,262 in Iraq and 503 in Sy­ria, are believed to be more than a coup­le of thousands troops shy of the actual­ number of U.S. forces in both countries­.

Pentagon spokeswoman Dana White said Tru­mp delegated authority to Defense Secret­ary Jim Mattis to determine force manage­ment levels for Iraq and Syria going for­ward.

"We want our reporting to Congress and t­o the public to be more easily and clear­ly understood," White said in a statemen­t, which was reported earlier on Wednesd­ay by BuzzFeed News.

"We will conduct a review to ensure that­ the numbers we provide to Congress and ­to the public accurately reflect the fac­ts on the ground. This is about transpar­ency."

Proponents within the U.S. military of c­hanging the system also argue that bring­ing that decision-making authority to th­e Pentagon from the White House will all­ow more flexibility in responding to unf­oreseen developments on the battlefield.

Replacing the force management level sys­tem with something more transparent coul­d be a tricky task, not least because of­ political sensitivities about U.S. forc­es in Iraq.

Influential Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sa­dr already has called on Iraq's governme­nt to order the withdrawal of U.S. and a­llied forces after the battle to retake ­the city of Mosul from Islamic State is ­complete.

The Iraqi and U.S. governments, however,­ have signaled the need for a continued ­U.S. military presence. How large that w­ould be has yet to be determined.

Too much information about the comings a­nd goings of U.S. troops, particularly i­f announced in advance, could give infor­mation to enemy, experts say

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