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| U.S. GENERAL ON WINNING IN IRAQ | |
July 14, 2005 | |
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U.S. Army Lt. Gen. John Vines discusses the security situation in Iraq, attacks on soldiers and civilians, the attempt to set up a new government, and the ability of the Iraqi security forces to fight insurgents. |
| JIM
LEHRER: Now, an update report from Iraq, and it comes from the number three commander
there, Army Lt. Gen. John Vines. Ray Suarez talked with him this morning from his headquarters in Baghdad. RAY SUAREZ: Gen. John Vines, welcome to the program. LT. GEN. JOHN VINES: It's good to be with you, Ray.
LT. GEN. JOHN VINES: Well, there are three broad groups here. There are religious extremists that are sometimes referred to as Sunni religious extremists, although they're not uniquely Sunnis, but there are some religious extremists. Zarqawi would be numbered among that group, and they want to impose their will on the entire populous of Iraq, as well as this portion of the world, indeed a large portion of the world. And they're willing to go to extraordinarily violent means to achieve that. Zarqawi has condemned himself by saying it's acceptable to murder innocent Iraqis, men, women and children, to achieve his violent purposes. There's a second group that are sometimes referred to as former regime elements related to the Baathist regime under Saddam Hussein, and certainly they wish to regain power. They are perhaps slightly larger in number than the, the religious extremists, who are fortunately, although violent, they're relatively small in number. And then there's a larger element sometimes referred to as the Sunni Arab rejectionists that I think are currently involved in some of the violence, and they perhaps have a more nationalistic approach; they are opposed to the presence of any foreign elements on Iraqi soil. So I think the three broad categories are probably who we are dealing with. RAY SUAREZ: And as a military commander, how do you organize to fight those different kinds of groups - one colonel in Iraq told a reporter recently, "Every time I kill one, I make three." It seems that that's pretty tough math to work with.
RAY SUAREZ: So, if I follow you, a political solution would go some distance toward ending at least a phase of the insurgency, but what about that part that's fed by foreign troops, can American and other forces seal the borders of Iraq? LT. GEN. JOHN VINES: No. We can't seal any borders; we can't seal American borders. That is a physical impossibility. What we do have to do, however, is limit the influence of foreign terrorists who infiltrate in, in many cases for the purpose of murdering Iraqis. We have to assist the Iraqi government in helping to stem the flow of that. Some of that can be done from in Iraq; some of it can be done by - through assistance of Iraq's neighbors, such as Syria, and we are working closely with the Iraqi government and negotiations with Syria to help stem that flow. |
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| Civilian deaths and support for the insurgents | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RAY SUAREZ: Is it your sense that attacks like the one earlier this week that killed children getting sweets from American forces dries up support, dries up the kind of quiet support that rank and file Iraqis might give, the cover, the shelter, the ability to melt into the landscape that some of these fighters seem to have?
RAY SUAREZ: More recently American troops have been doing operations in Western Iraq trying to root out the nest of insurgents. Are you able to hold those places after those assaults and sweeps, or are they left to allow the re-infiltration of those fighters? LT. GEN. JOHN VINES: We're increasing the presence of primarily Iraqi security forces in the western portion of the country. Insurgents, particularly foreign insurgents, such as Zarqawi, have found that they can operate with relative impunity because it's a relatively lightly populated area; they can intimidate the local populace into supporting them, or at least not opposing them, and use it to train and indoctrinate some of these foreigners and then send them into places like Ramadi or Fallujah or Baghdad or Mosul to attack its citizenry.
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| U.S. troop strength | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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LT. GEN. JOHN VINES: Well, any country, any populace, normally would not like the presence of foreign troops on its soil. To add to the number of foreign troops, I believe, would be counterproductive. This insurgency cannot be won by foreign troops; it can't be won by British troops, American troops, or others; it has to be won by the Iraqi security forces and the Iraqi government and a constitution that provides for protection for all its citizens.
We can create conditions so that they develop capacity in security forces, they develop governmental capacity, they develop capacities within their ministries to provide for basic services, they develop capacity to support their own security forces him the field; that can happen. We need to help create conditions so they can develop that, but doing it for them is not the right answer. |
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| Iraq's security forces | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: So let me make my last question about that in specific. How is the transition, the training up of an Iraqi army going? Are there enough people who show up to work every day, show up in uniform, and provide good order and disciplined response to the orders that they're given?
There is an enormous amount that remains to be done; let's be absolutely candid about this, but the courage of the individual Iraqi soldier or policeman is not in question. What we have to do, though, is develop institutions that can support them in the field, institutions that can ensure they're paid. They can ensure that when they're deployed that they have adequate food, that they have adequate water, that they have re-supplies that they need to conduct their day-to-day business. And that takes, quite honestly, some time. RAY SUAREZ: Lt. Commander John Vines is the commander of the multinational forces in Iraq. General, thanks for being with us. LT. GEN. JOHN VINES: It's good to be with you. Thank you. | ![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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