Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Baghdad

‘Rejectionists’ fear united, stable Iraq – Clinton

Rejectionists’ fear united, stable Iraq – Clinton BAGHDAD / IraqiNews.com: U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Baghdad unannounced on Saturday to reassure Iraqis that the United States will support them, even as it withdraws combat troops. But with Iraq reeling from a week of suicide bombings, she got a jittery reception from a country that still plainly relies on the United States for security, stability and economic survival, according to the New York Times newspaper. In an encounter with Iraqi students, journalists and activists, Mrs. Clinton was peppered with questions about how the United States could help Iraq in ways large and small — from building confidence in the Iraqi armed forces to supplying farmers with more up-to-date machinery, wrote Mark Landler in an article. Mrs. Clinton, making her first visit to Baghdad as secretary of state, promised to help Iraq with these and other issues. But, she told the audience of 120, there were some things Iraq had to do for itself. “The more united Iraq is, the more you will trust the security services,” Mrs. Clinton said in response to a question about the army from a young Iraqi journalist. “The security services have to earn your trust, but the people have to demand it.” Mrs. Clinton insisted that the recent suicide bombings, which killed 160 people and wounded hundreds more, did not mean that Iraq was returning to the sectarian violence that convulsed the country two years ago. Yet her first stop in Baghdad was to get a briefing on the security situation from the American commander in Iraq, Gen. Ray Odierno. Security concerns also came up immediately in Mrs. Clinton’s meeting later in the day with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. “Our meeting in 2007 really took place during very difficult circumstances,” Mr. Maliki said as they sat down, “But the security situation, and the situation generally, improved afterward.” Mrs. Clinton, who had flown in from Kuwait on a military transport plane, was greeted in Baghdad by the new American ambassador to Iraq, Christopher R. Hill; the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen; and the Iraqi foreign minister, Hoshyar Zebari. She was then driven to the new American Embassy in a heavily armed motorcade. “In Iraq, there will always be political conflicts,” Mrs. Clinton said to reporters on Friday evening, before setting off on the visit. “But I really believe that Iraq, as a whole, is on the right track.” She characterized the latest violence as the last gasp of “rejectionists” who feared that the government would succeed in creating a united and peaceful Iraq. The suicide bombings, she said, are “in an unfortunately tragic way, a signal that the rejectionists fear that Iraq is going in the right direction.” Mrs. Clinton has been a regular visitor here, coming three times as a senator to chart the progress of a war she voted to authorize but later said had been mismanaged by the Bush administration. She said she was pleased to be back, though the attacks cast a shadow over her visit. While the violence is far below the worst levels in 2007, 18 major attacks this month have kindled fears that Baathist jihadist elements could be reconstituting themselves into a smaller, but still deadly, insurgency that will exploit the withdrawal of American troops between now and 2011. Mrs. Clinton compared these latest suicide bombings to a spectacular terrorist attack that occurred several months after the Good Friday peace accord ended years of conflict in Northern Ireland. At times, her analysis echoed that of former Vice President Dick Cheney and former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld. Mr. Cheney spoke of the insurgency being in its “last throes,” during a period of relentless violence; Mr. Rumsfeld talked of “dead-enders” who kept fighting a lost cause. On Friday, Gen. David H. Petraeus, the commander of the military’s Central Command, testified before a subcommittee of the House Appropriations Com

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