It appears that U.S. President George W. Bush’s favorite
general has been handed the task of winning the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
as well as confronting the threat in Iran,
Top military commander in Iraq,
General David Petraeus, has been nominated to head the U.S. Central Command,
which has military responsibility for all three arenas.
According to US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Petraeus would
be replaced in Iraq
by his former number two, General Raymond Odierno.
“With the concurrence of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, I have recommended and the president has accepted and will nominate
General David Petraeus as the new commander of the Central Command,” Gates
said, cited by AFP.
It appears that the position opened last month when Admiral
William Fallon abruptly stepped down. The nomination must be approved by the
Senate, and democratic senators mentioned Petraeus would be questioned closely
in confirmation hearings about his views in those areas.
“Congress must ensure that General Petraeus does not bring
an Iraq bias to his new job,
at the expense of America's
broader security needs,” cautioned Senator Joe Biden, chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee.
Meanwhile, Gates said Petraeus was recommended for the post,
as he was “the best man for the job.” He also declared he did not know anybody
in the US
military who was better qualified to lead that area.
“I am honored to be nominated for this position and to have
an opportunity to continue to serve with America's soldiers, sailors, airmen,
marines, coast guardsmen, and civilians,” Petraeus said in a statement. He will
not leave his post in Iraq
until late summer or early fall and he will make a recommendation on whether
the drawdown of US forces would continue after the last surge brigade leaves Iraq in July.