Posted on 04/25/2006 8:39:48 PM PDT by HAL9000
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld makes surprise visit to Iraq Wednesday for meetings with Prime Minister-designate Jawad al-Maliki.
hhhmmm.....wonder if he knows anything about the wmd found or not found....
Go Rummy Go!
Don... please lay it on the line. Or get out.
Given all the logistics involved in his visit, it better be something substantial. Otherwise a teleconference should suffice, and would be both cheaper and easier on everyone concerned.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld is shown in Washington in this April 19, 2006 file photo. Rumsfeld sought to show U.S. support for Iraq's new leadership on Wednesday, making a surprise visit to Baghdad just days after Shi'ite politician Jawad al-Maliki was chosen as prime minister. (Yuri Gripas/Reuters)
This man is great.
Outstanding!
Good move.
"The only way to defend against terrorists is to go after the terrorists." -- Donald Rumsfeld
Very true.
General Sherman also had a low opinion of reporters, considering them all to be spies for the enemy. Of course, they had treatedhim badly while he was inCincinatti, portraying him as a madman because he predicted a long and bloody war.
You are kidding, right?
Not in the least.
There is a new Iraqi Prime Minister. You don't think it's worth it for the Secretary of Defense to visit the country where 135,000 American troops are fighting a war?
You are talking about logistics while a political storm rages.
Rumsfeld Visits Iraq for Meetings
ROBERT BURNS, AP Military Writer
BAGHDAD, Iraq - In a show of support for Iraq's emerging government, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld arrived in the capital unannounced Wednesday for meetings with Prime Minister-designate Jawad al-Maliki and other newly selected leaders.
Rumsfeld, who flew overnight from Washington after a private meeting on Capitol Hill with a group of Republican senators also was holding talks here with Gen. George Casey, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and other senior commanders to discuss progress on the military front.
Rumsfeld was expected to not only congratulate the Iraqis on breaking a deadlock over selection of a prime minister and other top political positions, but also to reinforce the Bush administration's message that the Iraqis should not expect U.S. forces to remain indefinitely.
Casey had said last year that if the insurgency did not worsen and the Iraqis remained on track toward establishing a government of national unity, then fairly substantial reductions in the U.S. troop presence were likely this spring and summer. So far, the total has been reduced only slightly, from about 138,000 to about 132,500. No further cuts are scheduled.
Rumsfeld's press secretary, Eric Ruff, told reporters aboard the defense secretary's flight from Washington that Rumsfeld's trip was designed to convey President Bush's encouragement at the latest steps toward putting in place Iraq's first fully constitutional government since the fall of the Saddam Hussein regime three years ago.
"The president asked us to go and show support for their new government," Ruff said.
In a break from past practice, Rumsfeld did not speak to reporters traveling with him on the 13-hour flight to Baghdad. Before he left Washington he met behind closed doors with Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., and about 15 other Republican members of the Senate to discuss the administration's $72 billion supplementary budget request, Ruff said.
Rumsfeld also raised with the senators the subject of the global war on terrorism. Ruff said he told them that rising concerns about Iran, with its nuclear ambitions and verbal threats against Israel, make it all the more important for the United States to succeed in Iraq and Afghanistan.
If peaceful democracies are established on Iran's western and eastern borders, then Iran will "lose big" in its efforts to advance Islamic extremism, Ruff quoted Rumseld as saying.
In an interview Monday with the Pentagon Channel, a television channel whose main audience is military members at home and abroad, Rumsfeld said he expected the insurgency to keep up the violence and try to stop the new political leadership in Baghdad from filling key ministry jobs with competent, non-sectarian officials.
Rumsfeld usually appears before one or more groups of U.S. troops when he visits Iraq, sometimes taking their questions. The troops usually do not ask Rumsfeld about Washington politics, but this visit comes in the immediate aftermath of an unusual public push by several retired generals to force Rumsfeld's resignation.
Among the retired officers to speak out is John Batiste, a two-star general who retired last year after commanding the Army's 1st Infantry Division in Iraq. Another is Charles Swannack, who commanded the 82nd Airborne in Iraq. Both said they believed Rumsfeld's Iraq strategy had failed and that he had ignored the military's advice.
President Bush, however, responded by stating unequivocally that he would not replace Rumsfeld.
Rumsfeld's visit to Iraq coincides not only with important progress on the political front in Baghdad but also with a recent surge in American casualties, which are on pace this month to hit the highest total since last November, when 84 U.S. troops died in Iraq.
The rise in U.S. deaths comes even as the Iraqi security forces are given more of a lead role in battling the insurgency, with the Americans in support. It has been expected that this shift of responsibilities would lead to fewer U.S. casualties.
This is Rumsfeld's 12th visit to Iraq since the invasion and his first this year. On his most recent previous visit, on Christmas Eve, he spoke hopefully to U.S. troops about the outlook for political stability in Baghdad, but he also cautioned that a premature exit by the American military would jeopardize that stability.
Also during the December visit Rumsfeld announced the first of what is still expected to be a series of U.S. combat troop reductions in 2006. He said the U.S. force was being reduced from the equivalent of 17 brigades to 15 brigades, or from about 138,000 total troops to roughly 130,000. Right now there are about 132,000 there.
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