Mr. JACK KEANE (Retired General, United States Army): They have a right to speak.
Jack Keane and Joe Hoar, each served in uniform for more than three decades.
In short, says retired General Jack Keane, Gates will have to plunge into Iraqi politics.
Lieutenant General JACK KEANE (Former Chief of Staff, U.S. Army): It's great to be back, thank you.
Today we're talking with General Jack Keane, a retired lieutenant general, former vice chief of staff of the Army.
One of the proponents of the buildup, retired Lieutenant General Jack Keane, joins us in a moment to take your questions.
Our guests are General Jack Keane, a former Army vice chief of staff, and he was in Iraq during the U.S. invasion.
Our guests are General Jack Keane, former Army vice chief of staff.
Jack Keane, a former Army vice chief of staff, was also skeptical, particularly about plans to put Iraqis in the lead for military operations.
General JACK KEANE (U.S. Army, Retired): I think there's probably a sense of relief in the Pentagon, if you were looking for one word to describe it.
General Jack Keane - former vice chief of the US Army and the architect of the "surge strategy" in Iraq - told the BBC that the object of the new offensive was to "take momentum" away from the Taliban.
Jack Keane, then the Army's deputy chief of staff, told the historians of his reaction to a June 2003 decision to transfer control of all coalition troops away from the land forces command that had been preparing for the mission.
Many of the people outside the administration who have been most prominent in proposing this have been people like General Jack Keane, a recently retired general, and a lot of people who are active in Tal Afar, which is a place where the clear hold-and-build strategy actually worked.
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