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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (427837)7/16/2003 1:08:31 PM
From: sea_biscuit  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
U.S. Soldiers Complain of Low Morale in Iraq

By Sue Pleming

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fed up with being in Iraq (news - web sites)
and demoralized by their role as peacekeepers in a risky place, a group of
U.S. soldiers aired their plight on U.S. television Wednesday and said they
had lost faith in the Army.

Told several times they would be going home
only to have their hopes dashed this week, a
small group of soldiers from the 3rd Infantry
Division in Iraq, spoke of poor morale and
disillusionment with Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld.

"If Donald Rumsfeld were here, I'd ask him for his
resignation," one disgruntled soldier told ABC's
"Good Morning America" show.


Asked by a reporter what his message would be
for Rumsfeld, another said: "I would ask him why
we are still here. I don't have any clue as to why
we are still in Iraq."


About 146,000 U.S. troops are serving amid
mounting security threats in postwar Iraq. The
death toll has now equaled the number killed in
the 1991 Gulf War

Sgt. Filipe Vega, said they had expected to
return home soon after the fall of Baghdad on
April 9. "We were told the fastest way back
home is through Baghdad and that's what we
did. Now we are still here," he complained.

The 3rd Infantry Division was the first U.S. unit to
enter Baghdad after driving through southern
Iraq from Kuwait.

Sgt. Terry Gilmore described a phone call with his wife, Stacey, when he told
her he would not be coming home soon.

"When I told her she started crying and I almost started crying. I just felt like
my heart was broken. I could not figure out ... how they could keep us here
after they told us we were coming home."

Commenting on troop frustration, White House spokesman Scott McClellan
said the president was grateful for the sacrifices being made by soldiers in
Iraq. "We will continue to make sure they have all the support and resources
they need as they do their job," he said.

A Pentagon spokeswoman said she understood the
frustration, but said morale was still high. "It's obviously a frustrating situation
for some of them, but it does not represent the entire 3rd Division."

Appearing on the same show, Stacey Gilmore said U.S. troops were
ill-prepared for the post-war phase. "They were told after the fighting ended
they were coming home. All I know is that morale is low and they are just
hanging in there, sticking through it."