For the past four years, President Bush’s Iraq strategy has been characterized  by his determination to ignore the realities on the ground. In 2006, he ignored  the recommendations of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group, which called for a  timetable for  the withdrawal of U.S. troops and  diplomatic engagement with Iraq’s neighbors. More recently, he vetoed Congress’s war funding bill  that called for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. He also ignored the advice of his military commanders and the majority of the American  public — who disapprove of his handling  of the war — and put more U.S. troops in the middle of Iraq’s sectarian  warfare. Additionally, Bush’s 2003 prediction that a “free Iraq” will “lead other nations to choose freedom” has turned out to be tragically myopic. With more than  3,500 U.S. troops and 40,000 Iraqis killed in the war, it is time for the United  States to hit “CTRL-ALT-DELETE.” Today, the Center for American Progress is  releasing a new “Strategic Reset” plan that extracts  U.S. troops from Iraq by the end of 2008 and looks “beyond the deteriorating  situation in Iraq in order to counter the threat from global terrorist groups  and ensure stability in the entire Middle East and Gulf region.” 
- The time has come for the U.S. to stop arming and training the Iraqi Security Forces. Much of the focus of Bush’s Iraq strategy has been pushing Iraq’s “national unity” government to succeed by training national security forces  and meeting political benchmarks. But as Center for American Progress Senior  Fellows Lawrence J. Korb and Brian Katulis note in “Strategic Reset,” “Iraq’s  so-called ‘national unity’ government is neither unified nor an effective government. … Iraq’s national unity government currently lacks a unified  leadership that works for the common good of the whole country.” The Iraqi  government has failed to meet all of the political benchmarks that were  supposed to  have been achieved by March. Acknowledging  the fragmentation of Iraq means immediately phasing out the training and arming  of Iraq’s security forces, which have been riddled with factionalism and absenteeism. Violence in Iraq also grows as the number of Iraqi forces grows, since what the  United States is basically doing by continuing to train Iraqi troops is “arming  up different sides in multiple civil wars” and providing “billions of dollars of  U.S. military assistance” to Iran, whose allies have infiltrated the security  forces. 
 
- The administration should begin a phased redployment of troops out of Iraq. Bush’s full escalation will result in approximately 170,000  troops in Iraq, which is the highest level since the initial invasion. Fifty-nine percent of the  American public wants to reduce U.S. troop  levels in Iraq, as do 71 percent of the  Iraqi public. Strategic Reset calls for  redeployment to begin by the summer of 2007 at the latest. “U.S. troop levels in Iraq could decline to about 70,000  by January 2008, with a full redeployment completed by September 2008.” Marine  units and Army Special Forces remaining in Iraq until fall 2008 would focus on  counter-terrorism, rather than training Iraqi security forces. Bush’s current “no  end in sight” strategy “fosters a culture of dependency among Iraqis by propping  up certain members of Iraq’s national government without fundamentally changing  Iraq’s political dynamics,” at the expense of our overstretched military. 
 
- The drawdown of troops in Iraq must be accompanied by a diplomatic surge with our global allies to end the conflict. Strategic Reset urges the Bush  administration to build on this progress and participate in regional conferences  and engage in bilaterial discussions with Iran, ensuring that “the costs of intervening to exploit Iraq’s internal  divisions are much higher than the benefits gained from working collectively to  contain, manage, and utimately resolve Iraq’s internal conflicts.” This targeted  regional diplomacy would also encourage countries to work with the United States  to dismantle global terrorist networks such as Al Qaeda. A December World Public  Opinion poll found that 75  percent of Americans — including 72  percent of Republicans and 81 percent of Democrats — support direct engagement  with Iran and Syria. As Katulis and Korb note, when  historians “look back on the period 2001 to 2007, they will see seven years of increased instability and  strife in the Middle East, a downward  spiral preceeded by seven years of relative hope and progress in the late  1990s.” Currently, the Palestinian terrorities are in a “turbulent divide,”  as Hamas has taken over the Gaza Strip  and President Mahmoud Abbas, head of the Fatah political party, has “dissolved  the 3-month-old unity government.” The Arab-Israeli conflict is critical to  ensuring regional security, and “governments and their people in the Middle East  view the United States more positively when it is working to address tensions between Israel and its  neighbors.” “Strategic Reset” calls on Bush  to apoint a special Middle East envoy who would have the support of two senior  ambassadors devoted to resolving Middle East conflicts. Not only does the United  States need to negotiate with Iran and Syria to solve these issues, but it must  also “remove any roadblocks it may have inappropriately placed in Israeli  exploration of Syrian intentions.”