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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Beobe who wrote (27418)9/11/2003 2:58:58 PM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Rumsfeld: Rebuilding up to Iraqis

WASHINGTON — Iraqis rather than Americans will
have to repair most of the damage done to their
country by Saddam Hussein's socialist Baath party,
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld declared
yesterday.

"I don't believe it's our job to reconstruct that country
after 30 years of centralized, Stalinist-like economic
controls in that country," Rumsfeld told a National
Press Club audience. "The Iraqi people are going to
have to reconstruct that country over a period of time."

He added, "The infrastructure of that country was not
terribly damaged by the war at all."

The U.S. "exit strategy" is to turn over to Iraqis both
political control and responsibility for keeping order as
soon as possible, said Rumsfeld, who at one point was
jeered by two hecklers opposed to U.S. policy in Iraq.

"Hey, Rumsfeld, what do you say, how many soldiers
did you kill today?" they chanted before they were
removed from the club. Police said no arrests were
made.

Rumsfeld, who returned Monday from a trip to Iraq and
Afghanistan, acknowledged that administration officials
underestimated how much reconstruction would be
necessary.

Rumsfeld backed a new United Nations resolution on
Iraq as an important means for encouraging greater international participation in the country's
reconstruction but said he doubted it would produce a large number of additional international
peacekeeping forces.

In a speech and question-and-answer session, Rumsfeld said he still expected to find weapons of mass
destruction inside Iraq. But he clarified a remark he made during the war about where those weapons were.

"We know where they are," Rumsfeld said March 30, as U.S. forces approached Baghdad. "They're in the
area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south and north somewhat."

"I should have said, 'I believe they're in that area; our intelligence tells us they're in that area,' " Rumsfeld
said yesterday. "That was our best judgment."

The number of American troops deployed in Iraq is nearly 116,000, a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition
said yesterday. That is at least 10,000 less than previously believed.

Three nations want to speed
up transfer of power to Iraqis

UNITED NATIONS — In
amendments to a U.S. draft
resolution, France, Germany
and Russia are urging a
speedy transfer of power
from the U.S.-led coalition to
an interim Iraqi
administration.

The amendments demand
more power for Iraqis and
the United Nations in running
the country.

The amendments were given
to the United States ahead of
a meeting called by
Secretary-General Kofi
Annan to try to get the five
veto-wielding permanent
Security Council members to
unite behind a plan to
stabilize Iraq. Foreign
ministers of the five — the
United States, Russia, China,
Britain and France — are expected to attend the meeting Saturday in Geneva.

The U.S. draft resolution invites the U.S.-appointed Iraqi Governing Council to cooperate with the
United Nations and U.S. officials in Baghdad to produce "a timetable and program for the drafting of a
new constitution for Iraq and for the holding of democratic elections."

But it contains no time frame of when this should happen, and it leaves the key decision in the hands
of the Governing Council, which has taken months just to form a Cabinet.

The United States believes the Iraqis must remain in charge of this process — but France, Germany
and Russia want a much faster timetable. The French-German amendments call for an interim Iraqi
administration to take control of "all civilian areas, including control over natural resources and use
of international assistance."

A key aim of the U.S. draft is to get countries such as Turkey, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh the U.N.
authorization they say they need before committing any troops to Iraq.

Also ...

The U.S. military said today that it had detained Al-Jazeera reporter Atwar Bahjat, saying the reporter
for the Qatar-based Arabic satellite channels had broken its "ground rules." ... A British parliamentary
committee has concluded that Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon misled the panel about his staff's
concerns that a dossier making the case for war in Iraq relied on faulty intelligence, the Evening
Standard newspaper reported yesterday. ... More than 10,000 artifacts remain missing from Iraq's
National Museum five months after a spree of looting that coincided with the capture of Baghdad by
U.S. forces, but more than 3,400 other stolen items have been recovered, the U.S. military said
yesterday. ... Alan Foley, who heads the CIA's Weapons Intelligence, Nonproliferation, and Arms
Control Center and became embroiled in controversy over whether the White House stretched
evidence about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, said he planned to leave the agency in October.

seattletimes.nwsource.com