WASHINGTON — A new assessment of Iraq by U.S. intelligence agencies provides little evidence that the American troop ‘surge’ has accomplished its goals and predicts that the U.S.-backed government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki will become ‘more precarious’ in the months ahead. A declassified summary of the report released Thursday said that violence remains high, warns that U.S. alliances with former Sunni Muslim insurgents could undercut the central government and says that political compromises are ‘unlikely to emerge’ in the next 12 months. Perhaps most strikingly, U.S. intelligence analysts concluded that factions and political players in and outside Iraq already are maneuvering in expectation of a drawdown of U.S. troops - moves that could later heighten sectarian bloodshed. ‘The national intelligence assessment confirms what we feared the most: The U.S. has become deeply embroiled in Iraq’s civil war,’ said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., the chairman of the Senate intelligence committee. A White House spokesman, Gordon Johndroe, said the report, known as a National Intelligence Estimate, showed that President Bush’s decision to send an additional 28,000 troops to Iraq is beginning to have an effect. While it said that the surge has brought ‘measurable, but uneven […]

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