NEWS TRANSCRIPT from the United States Department of Defense
DoD News Briefing
Chairman, Senate Armed Services Committee, Senator John Warner (R-Va), Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, Commander, U.S. Central Command, General John Abizaid
Wednesday, January 26, 2005 - 5:54 p.m. EST
Russell Senate Office Building
SEN. WARNER: Thank you very much. The committee has had two hours of intense briefing with the secretary of Defense and General Abizaid. I can say without any hesitation or qualification whatsoever it was one of our finest and
most thorough briefings that the committee has had throughout this operation.
And I'd like to commend you, Mr. Secretary and General, for the work
that you have done, are doing, and continue to do.
The one thing that I urged the secretary and the general is that the
information that they imparted to some 20 senators today, in my judgment, needs to be quickly conveyed throughout the United States by the Secretary of State,
Defense, and others in positions of authority.
The elections are going forward. Every expectation is that they will
meet a measure of success. But the period of aftermath of the elections is fraught
with uncertainty and we should prepare the American people for as many
eventualities as could possibly happen.
For example, it will take several weeks after the election to certify
the results. The assembly will then have to appoint the president and two
deputies. They will appoint a prime minister. The prime minister has to be
confirmed by the assembly.
Now, this is a period of uncertainty that will descend upon Iraq. And
you've got to remember, these people have been suffering for some 30 years under Saddam Hussein and the acceptance and placing of confidence in another government, which is, again, not the final government, but an interim government, is going to take time.
And very clearly the secretary and the general explained to us we could
anticipate a level of increased insurgency in this period of time and increased
difficulty in trying to continue the good work that's been done to train all
segments of the security forces.
So Mr. Secretary, I would hope that you could convey to the nation this
message which you've given, I think, very successfully to our senators. And I'll
yield the floor to you at this time.
SEC. RUMSFELD: I have no statement to make other than we'd be happy to respond to a couple questions.
Q For General Abizaid: Can you flesh out a little bit the role
U.S. forces will play in a post-election Iraq environment? Doug Feith today, the
undersecretary for policy, signaled that there'd be more -- a more intense effort
to train, equip and organize Iraqi forces and less actually providing physical
security. Can you shed any light on that?
GEN. ABIZAID: Well, clearly, in the post-election environment in Iraq
we intend to increase the level of our training and partnership with the Iraqi
security forces. Exactly how much force we would move from insurgency and
counterinsurgency operations and counter-terrorist operations remains to be seen.
Our staffs are working on that, but we clearly know that Iraqi security forces need
to mature further. We know that the Iraqi people want that to happen. And as we
move from this period of occupation to a period of partnership, more intense effort
on our part to get those forces ready is something that has to be done.
Q General Abizaid? General Abizaid, if I could ask you something
that Chairman Warner spoke about, which was what you expect after the elections.
Apparently the committee was told to expect that things may be harder or more
difficult. Can you elaborate on that? And what is that basis coming from? Is that
from intelligence, that hunch? What do you suspect is going to happen?
GEN. ABIZAID: I think that we all need to understand that in Iraq
today that what is happening is revolutionary in political terms. We also need to
understand that the thing the enemy fears the most, the thing that people such as
Zarqawi and bin Laden and Zawahiri fear the most are free elections, elections that
are the result of a fair process where a new government is chosen and a new future is taken. And so we should anticipate that after the elections that the people that desire to derail the process of a new future for Iraq will continue to fight and
continue to fight hard, but they're fighting an uphill battle because the Iraqi
security forces, with our backing, will be successful.
SEC. RUMSFELD: Let me comment on that briefly.
If you think about it, Iraq originally had a governing council of 25
people with a rotating chairmanship. It was difficult for the United States
government and the coalition to interact with a council of 25 people with a
rotating presidency.
They moved from there to the current arrangement with a prime minister,
where you have ministers and a prime minister and a president, and the coalition
can interact with them and make agreements as to budgets and what do you want --how many people do you need in the army, and you can then proceed on things.
We're now going to move into this period that the chairman just
mentioned, where, for a couple of weeks after the election, the results will not
have been certified. So there's a period of ambiguity -- who's going to be in the
government.
And then, after it's certified, they seat the assembly, the
Transitional National Assembly. And then they get organized. And that's another
period of weeks, however many. Who knows?
And then what they do is they select a president and two deputies. And
that's going to take a little time.
Then those three people will recommend a prime minister, and the prime
minister will then recommend cabinet ministers. Now this takes some time to --
these are not people who have a lot of experience in a democratic system, where
you're going to be negotiating among all the people in this constituent assembly.
The next step, obviously, then, is that they have to -- the assembly
has to approve by, I believe, by a majority vote, all of the ministers that are
selected.
Then the ministers have to get into office and gather people around
them, and the -- if you think about it, there are already people in those jobs.
And the people coming in may be from a different tribe or a different viewpoint,
and they may want to change the people in there. So now you've got some turbulence in these ministries.
And it is a -- I think General Abizaid used the word not a mature
democratic system at this stage. It's in its early stages. And I -- the reason I
mention all of this is because I think to be realistic, we have to recognize that
that's the period we're moving into. And it will take some time for that
government to settle down, gets its staff worked out, get its relationships worked
out among the ministers, and they -- the -- I mean, if you think about it, it takes
coordination between the Ministry of Interior and the Ministry of Defense. And so
they're going to have to get to know each other. They're going to have to have a --
develop some working relationships. And I think it's -- I think that's the period
we're going into, and that's the context we ought to be looking at, the things and
the events that will be taking place in the period immediately ahead. You're
looking -- I would guess, well, into March, possibly into April, for these things
to sort themselves out.
Q Mr. Secretary, do you believe this will be as violent a period as
it has been in the run-up to the elections? Does that -- ?
SEC. RUMSFELD: I don't know. I -- General Abizaid believes that we
can --
We have to recognize what -- how determined the people we're up against
are. These are people who cut off people's heads on television. These are people
that go around killing innocent civilians throughout Iraq. These are people that
know they have a lot to lose if Iraq is successful in setting itself on a path of
democracy.
SEC. RUMSFELD: So one has to expect that the level of violence will
either stay where it is, or go up or down modestly during this period as they
attempt to prevent from happening that which is going to happen.
Q Mr. Secretary, a top U.N. election official today said the U.S.
military was getting too involved, overenthusiastic in getting -- helping the
get-out-the-vote effort in Iraq. Do you think the U.S. military should be involved
in helping get out the vote?
SEC. RUMSFELD: Get out the vote.
Q The Marines are handing out flyers encouraging the Iraqis to vote.
SEC. RUMSFELD: [Inaudible] …I just don't know.
GEN. ABIZAID: I think the only thing that you would see inside Iraq is
American forces moving to assist the Iraqi Interim Government in ways that they've requested and the Iraqi Electoral Commission in ways that they've requested. We understand that our role is to ensure that this is an Iraqi election. And I think you'll see on Saturday millions of Iraqis will go to vote because they want to vote.
Q Don't you think it's appropriate for American soldiers to do that
if they're asked to; or have they been asked to?
GEN. ABIZAID: No, I am saying that millions of Iraqis are going to go
vote because they want to vote, and American soldiers do not have the mission to
get the vote out.
STAFF: Last question
Q Mr. Secretary, there's word that Doug Feith, Undersecretary Doug
Feith is going to be handing in his resignation today. Has he talked to you about
this, or did you know that this was coming?
SEC. RUMSFELD: He visited with me after the election and indicated
that at some point this year, later this year, into the summer, by summer, that he
thought he, after serving four years, would like to move back into the private
sector. And I've asked him to stick around. We don't have a replacement. And
he's agreed to do that. I don't know what he's announced or what's been announced, but it happens to be a fact that he has had that discussion with me, and I'm hopeful he'll stay [Crosstalk] until we are able to find an appropriate successor, which we've not started looking for.
SEN. WARNER: We'll take a question in the back and wrap up.
Q I have a question for any of you who have any idea if the
helicopter crash today was due to bad weather, inclement weather, and whether their mission was at all related to the election. Were they there to support the
election in any way, and what was that?
GEN. ABIZAID: As I understand it on my most recent information, the
helicopter was on a mission in support of the elections in Ar Rutbah (sp?) in Al
Anbar Province.
I can't tell you -- I don't know as to whether or not it was weather-
related, mechanical or enemy action. We believe that we lost very tragically 30
Marines and one sailor. Our condolences go out to their family. I wish I could
give you more information, but as you can imagine there is an intensive
investigation going on.
SEN. WARNER: Thank you very much.
SEC. RUMSFELD: Thank you, folks.
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