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| NEWSMAKER: GENERAL PACE | |
March 31, 2003 |
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Jim Lehrer discusses the progress of the military campaign in Iraq with Marine Corps General Peter Pace, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. |
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General, welcome. GEN. PETER PACE: Thank you, Jim, good to be with you. JIM LEHRER: First on this tragic incident near Najaf, where the thirteen people were in the van, the U.S. soldiers shot seven women and children were killed. What can you tell us about that? GEN. PETER PACE: It really is sad, Jim. These are first reports, so we'll get more clarity as the days go on. But as I understand it, what happened was a vehicle was approaching the checkpoint that was ordered to stop, it did not stop. The guards fired the warning shots toward the vehicle, the vehicle still did not stop. They then fired into the engine of the vehicle, trying to make it stop, it still didn't stop, so they ended up firing into the vehicle itself and as you reported, first reports are seven dead. JIM LEHRER: Now, is this in keeping with the current rules of engagement? Did the soldiers do the right thing? GEN. PETER PACE: They absolutely did the right thing; they tried to warn the vehicle to stop, it did not stop. And it was unusual that that vehicle would be full of only women and that the driver was a woman. So we need to find out why it was that they were acting the way they did. JIM LEHRER: Now, have the rules of engagement on issues like this changed since the first combat began and there were incidents involving civilians or at least people posing as civilians, it turned out to be combatants, et cetera?
JIM LEHRER: In other words, this is not a change from the day that this war began twelve days ago? In other words, those soldiers if there had been complete nonresistance from the Iraqi people and the Iraqi military up to this point, they would still have acted the way they did? GEN. PETER PACE: I think it's fair to say that the environment you're in certainly will impact on how you perceive the threat. So because the Iraqi death squads have been pretending to surrender, because they've been dressing in civilian clothes, because they have hidden in hospitals, because they've done many, many things that are in fact war crimes, certainly the U.S. soldiers are going to be more aware, and more concerned about vehicles that approach them like that. So you can't just look at it in isolation. Clearly the environment does impact your perception of the threat. JIM LEHRER: Well, that was the point I was trying to get. Because of all these other things that, let's face it, people are being a little more careful than they would have been otherwise, that's what I'm trying to get at. GEN. PETER PACE: That's fair; and the rules have not changed. But the perception of the environment in which you're operating, certainly are impacted when the other side is creating as many war crimes as they have. |
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| Iraq's war tactics | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
JIM
LEHRER: Gen. Wallace, the commander of ground troops over there, caused
quite a dustup when he said that the, that he and others at command had
miscalculated or the expectations about civilian and military resistance,
they were wrong about it. Do you agree with him on that, that this has
been slightly different than you all had expected at that level?
GEN. PETER PACE: I haven't seen or read Gen. Wallace' comments. I will simply speak for myself. JIM LEHRER: Sure. GEN. PETER PACE: The thing that has surprised me individually is the number of war crimes that the Iraqi regime has already committed using hospitals for operational headquarters -- putting weapons into schools; dressing in civilian clothes; using women and children as shields on the battlefield -- all of those things -- and then preventing the troops that want to surrender from surrendering by literally having a rifle pointed at the back of their heads and when they try to surrender, shooting them. The woman that was killed on the bridge today, or yesterday, over there, all she was trying to do was to get out of the way of the fleet; they shot her in the back. It's criminal. And it's disgusting. JIM LEHRER: Well, you were involved as vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in all the planning that went into this. You did not expect, or speaking for yourself now, you did not expect this kind of conduct from the Iraqis?
JIM LEHRER: That kind of thing is going to lead, of course we don't know, as you say, we don't know the details of what happened today with the women and children in the van. But let's assume they were innocents. They're going to be more incidents like that because of this earlier conduct, is that correct? GEN. PETER PACE: I don't know that there will be more incident or not. Certainly the soldiers on the ground will be very keenly aware of the people coming toward them. If they're wearing civilian clothes, they will not assume that those are really civilians. If they're driving a vehicle they will not assume that that vehicle is a friendly vehicle. They're going to be very careful, as they should be, to protect themselves and their comrades on the battlefield. |
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| Fighting the Iraqi military | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JIM LEHRER: Your Pentagon
colleagues today, reported some of it just now, have said that the coalition
bombing has really made a difference in terms of degrading or really hurting
the ability of the republican guards around Baghdad to fight. Can you
give us a feel for the extent of this degrading -- this destruction?
JIM LEHRER: So you're going to try to destroy them from the air before you take them on on the ground, is that the plan? GEN. PETER PACE: Actually, there will be a combination of ground maneuver and air bombardment. One complements the other. What we'd like to them to do is to surrender. These thugs in the regime that controls that country are not worth dying for, we'd much rather have them surrender and become part of a free Iraq. JIM LEHRER: But these are the toughest soldiers Saddam has, are they not? In other words in the military, I'm not talking about paramilitary now, but the professional military within the Iraqi forces, these are the toughest guys, right? GEN. PETER PACE: The Republican Guard and the special Republican Guards are in fact the regime's toughest soldiers and they are dying in scores right now.
GEN. PETER PACE: We have had some engagements, not major battles, but for the lieutenant and sergeant on the ground it's been a major battle,. In those engagements we have destroyed them readily. But again, that's because we've got great lieutenants and captains and sergeants and lance corporations making wonderful decisions doing what we've trained them to do. JIM LEHRER: So far, what has, what have our captains and lieutenants and sergeants picked up in terms of the ability and the willingness of the Republican Guards to fight back? GEN. PETER PACE: I haven't had the pleasure of talking to our guys, Jim, so I can't report firsthand. And I don't know what our tactical level lessons learned are. But from the strategic level sitting back here in the comfort of Washington D.C. watching our guys with pride, our forces’ fighting ability, our ability to use both ground maneuver and air power have been stunning. JIM LEHRER: But have the Republican Guards any of them surrendered in any groups in large numbers yet? GEN. PETER PACE: I'm not sure how many of the Republican Guard; we have just under 5,000 enemy prisoners of war right now. How many of those are Republican Guard I don't know. JIM LEHRER: Are you expecting Republican Guards to surrender? Is that part of the plan, or are you prepared to kill every one of them if you have to? GEN. PETER PACE: We would like them to surrender. It's their choice. If they fight, they will die. If they surrender, they can have the opportunity to participate in rebuilding a free Iraq, an Iraq that is not a threat to Americans, an Iraq that does not have weapons of mass destruction, an Iraq that is governed by its own people, uses its own resources for the betterment of their own people. So I would say the soldier who are in the Republican Guards right now, you have a choice. You can surrender and be part of the future or you can die in place. |
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| The U.S. military plan of action | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JIM LEHRER: Are the
soldiers and the marines on the ground ready for a major attack on Baghdad,
our folks?
GEN. PETER PACE: Ready, but I will not predict when. The ground commanders over there, Gen. Franks and his commanders, will pick the time and place of our choosing. JIM LEHRER: Gen. Franks will make that decision? GEN. PETER PACE: Yes, he will.
GEN. PETER PACE: There is always discussion. But we have a wonderful field commander in Gen. Tom Franks, all his commanders below him are doing a magnificent job; they'll know when the right time to go is. Of course Tom will consult with the secretary and\or the president, but will it be Tom's battlefield judgment when the time is. JIM LEHRER: Much has been made, there has been some charges in fact that, or allegations or whatever you want to call them, that Secretary Rumsfeld is actually running this war from back here in Washington. From your perspective, is that true? GEN. PETER PACE: No. The rumors on that are absolutely incredible. I have had the great pleasure of serving the vice chairman now since October of 2001. I've been in literally hundreds of meetings, dozens and dozens of those with Tom Franks. Tom has been coming to and from Washington for the last several months. The planning has been done by all the commanders: the air commander, the navy commander, the army commander, and marine commander, all feeding their ideas and thoughts to Tom Franks; he then bringing that forward. This is very much a military planned event, rightfully so, briefed to and approved by our civilian leaders. JIM LEHRER: Secretary Rumsfeld always mentions your name when he talks about the plan, he says Gen. Myers, Gen. Pace, and others signed off on the plan. Is that literally true, you signed off on it, you think this a good plan, you thought so and you still think so? GEN. PETER PACE: I didn't sign anything. JIM LEHRER: Okay. Right.
But the scope of the operations is all within the original plan, and the flexibility has been demonstrated right from the beginning. When Gen. Franks saw that the oil fields down South might be destroyed as the oil fields were in Kuwait, he quickly sent the ground forces in there and was able to secure over 1,000 oil wells, maybe 80 percent of the Iraqi people's wealth that's in the ground he was able to secure for them for their future. And there's many, many other examples of the plan being set in motion and then circumstances on the ground providing opportunities, like the night that we got the great intelligence on where we thought Saddam was and the very, very specific precise attack. Since that time, although I don't know exactly where Saddam is, he has not been seen alive anyplace. There's been some tapes, but there's been no Saddam. So where is he? He's either dead or he's injured or he's afraid to come all because his own soldiers will kill him, or he's afraid to come out because his people will kill him -- but no Saddam. |
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| Saddam Hussein's current status | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JIM LEHRER: Tory Clark
also said that the families of the leaders, I assume, Saddam Hussein's
families too, are trying to leave the country or are leaving the country.
Where are they going, how can they get out?
GEN. PETER PACE: We've seen reports of that. It doesn't surprise me that a group of elite thugs like the people who rule that country would in the last analysis want to save their own hides and try to get out of the country. That's what we understand some of them are trying to do now. How exactly they would leave I don't know. I do know we will continue to look for them.
GEN. PETER PACE: No, not at all. I'm just saying as one person that it was a great strike on the compound we thought he was and we haven't seen him since. JIM LEHRER: Do you think he's dead? GEN. PETER PACE: I don't know. I do know he's not visible. JIM LEHRER: Why don't we know things like that? GEN. PETER PACE: Well, we haven't had a chance to sift through the rubble yet. JIM LEHRER: But in other words intelligence was so good that we went in there with a precision bombing, but we haven’t had… the intelligence since then is not that good? I'm just curious as to why we don't know more about the whereabouts or even the state of health of Saddam Hussein. GEN. PETER PACE: What we knew, Jim, going into that attack, was that based on several sources of intelligence that it was highly likely that Saddam was in the place that we bombed. Since that time, the sources that indicated to us that he was alive, and there are various ways, as you know, of collecting intelligence, none of those sources any more show us that he is still alive. It doesn't mean he's dead. But he's not visible publicly, and he's not been seen or reported to have been seen by anybody. JIM LEHRER: The coalition still trying to keep the television operation down, so even if he is, if he does happen to be alive, he can't talk to the Iraqi people? GEN. PETER PACE: Part of command and control for the Iraqi military is their television system. So that is a valid military target. We have in fact been partially successful in taking the Iraqi television off the air, as we have been with some of their telephone systems and the like. But they have some mobile capabilities that will continue to go after. JIM LEHRER: They keep coming back, they go off the air for three hours, then they come back. Is that a big deal, that's what I guess I'm really asking, to keep the leadership of Iraq, to make it impossible for them to talk to their people on television? GEN. PETER PACE: It's a slice of what you want to accomplish. You want to make sure that from a command and control standpoint, that the leadership of the country cannot give orders to the armed forces. So from a military standpoint the reason to have him off the television is to make sure that he cannot communicate orders to his troops, if he in fact he can still give orders. JIM LEHRER: Gen. Franks said in his briefing over the weekend that there is no sign that anybody is really giving out any controls, any orders from the top in Iraq. What does he mean by that? GEN. PETER PACE: He means that, I don know what -- I'll tell you what I think he means. JIM LEHRER: You got it.
JIM LEHRER: Gen. Pace, thank you very much for being with us tonight. GEN. PETER PACE: Jim, thank you for your time. |
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