Posted on 05/06/2004 3:35:16 PM PDT by yonif
WASHINGTON - President Bush apologized Thursday for the abuse and humiliation of Iraqi prisoners by U.S. soldiers, but rejected calls for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
"Secretary Rumsfeld has served our nation well," Bush told reporters in an appearance in the White House Rose Garden. Speaking slowly for emphasis, he added, "Secretary Rumsfeld has been the secretary during two wars, and he is an important part of my Cabinet."
Bush told Jordan's King Abdullah II: "I was sorry for the humiliation suffered by the Iraqi prisoners and the humiliation suffered by their families," and said the images had made Americans "sick to their stomach."
Bush spoke as his administration sought to counter a worldwide wave of revulsion over photographs showing Iraqi prisoners, some of them hooded, naked and in sexually humiliating poses, in an American-run prison in the Baghdad area.
Some of the images show American captors mugging and gloating amid the misery of the Iraqis. One, published Thursday on the front page of The Washington Post, showed a naked man on the concrete cellblock floor, his neck in a leash, the other end of which was in the hand of a female American GI.
For the second straight day, Bush vowed that those responsible would be brought to justice.
On that, the president drew no dissent, but a growing list of Democrats in Congress said Rumsfeld should resign, be fired, or even impeached.
House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi told reporters she believes Rumsfeld must go, then issued a statement that said, "The abuses could have been prevented with proper leadership at the top of the chain of command."
Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, issued a statement saying, "For the good of our country, the safety of our troops, and our image around the globe Secretary Rumsfeld should resign. If he does not resign forthwith, the president should fire him."
Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, the Democratic presidential nominee-in-waiting, also jabbed at Bush on the issue. In an appearance in California, Kerry said, "As president I will not be the last to know what is going on in my command. I will demand accountability for those who serve, and I will take responsibility for their actions."
Partisan differences surfaced in the House, which voted 365-50 in favor of legislation that called for a military investigation of the abuses but omitted a call for a bipartisan congressional inquiry that the Democrats had sought.
Bush's unambiguous endorsement came as Rumsfeld was preparing for what promises to be two contentious sessions with congressional committees on Friday. The defense secretary scrapped his only scheduled public appearance Thursday and met privately with two members of the Senate panel that has called him to testify.
In the Rose Garden, Bush told reporters he had chastised Rumsfeld in a private meeting earlier this week for failing to inform him about the abusive treatment of prisoners before it became public knowledge.
The president had stopped short of issuing an apology for the abuse on Wednesday, when he granted interviews to two Arab television networks. This time, in the presence of the king of an Arab country, he said he was sorry.
At the same time, he was unflinching in his support of Rumsfeld, whom he called back to the Pentagon in 2001 for his second tour of duty as secretary.
"He will stay in my Cabinet," the president said.
The Bush administration's efforts at damage control extended to the State Department.
There, Secretary of State Colin Powell talked by phone with Jakob Kellenberger of the International Red Cross and assured him the Bush administration was dealing with the abuse issue.
"We will answer in a comprehensive way," Powell told reporters.
Powell talked to Kellenberger after the International Red Cross said that months before word of the abuses at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison became public, it had repeatedly asked U.S. authorities to take action over reported abuses. "We were aware of what was going on, and based on our findings we have repeatedly requested the U.S. authorities to take corrective action," said Nada Doumani, a spokeswoman for the organization in Geneva. She said Red Cross representatives have visited the prison and talked privately with detainees since last year.
Democrats and Republicans alike expressed their shock and outrage at the abusive treatment of prisoners, but thus far, outright calls for Rumsfeld's ouster were limited to Democrats.
Rep. Charles Rangel of New York joined the chorus of Democrats calling for Rumsfeld to step down or for Bush to fire him. If neither happens, Rangel said, Congress should impeach the defense secretary "for withholding from the president, Congress and the American people information on the abuses at the Iraqi prison."
That seemed extremely unlikely in a Congress under Republican control.
Democrats, shot back House Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas, "want to win the White House more than they want to win the war" on terror.
"The charges of abuses will be examined fully and immediate corrective measures taken to prevent against their recurrence. That's assured," said Rep. Porter Goss, R-Fla.
Just like he took responsibility for falling down while skiing, or for offensive material on his website, or for offensive and downright incorrect information in lines he's given dozens of times in his speeches (Carter & Baker as possible envoys, Benedict Arnold companies,etc.)
In each of those cases, he blamed somebody else, never taking responsibility for anything bad that is done in his campaign.
Idiot.
Now, it is true that Les Aspin resigned presumably over the "Blackhawk Down" incident in Somalia, but anyone who thinks that this was a new precedent or paradigm for how a SECDEF should behave need only consider that his successor, Mr. Cohen, did not see fit to resign over the USS Cole, or the Sudanese Aspirin factory bombing or the attack on the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade.
Hmmm... let me just think about this for a minute...worldwide wave of revlusion....sort of like that worldwide wave of revulsion (tm) that followed this week's brutal murder of a pregnant woman and her four children in Gaza....sort of like that worldwide wave of revulsion(tm) when Danny Perl was brutally murdered....sort of like that worldwide wave of revulsion(tm) over the brutal murders and dislocations of a million black Africans in the Sudan....oh wait a minute, sorry, I must be on the wrong page here...
Now it's my turn to say "yes, but...". I can't justify what our troops did, but I can't get too worked up over it, either. I'm just sick to death of the worldwide wave of hypocracy that this incident has provided an excuse for.
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