Washington recasts terror war as 'struggle'
http://www.iht.com/bin/print_ipub.php?file=/articles/2005/07/26/news/terror.
php

By Eric Schmitt and Thom Shanker The New York Times
WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 2005

WASHINGTON The Bush administration is retooling its slogan for the fight
against Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups, pushing the idea that the
long-term struggle is as much an ideological battle as a military mission,
according to senior administration and military officials.
 
 
In recent speeches and news conferences, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
and the country's top military officer have spoken of "a global struggle
against violent extremism" rather than "the global war on terror," which had
been the catchphrase of choice.
 
 
Administration officials say the earlier phrase may have outlived its
usefulness, because it focused attention solely, and incorrectly, on the
military campaign.
 
 
General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the
National Press Club on Monday that he had "objected to the use of the term
'war on terrorism' before, because if you call it a war, then you think of
people in uniform as being the solution."
 
He said the threat instead should be defined as violent extremism, with the
recognition that "terror is the method they use."
 
 
Although the military is heavily engaged in the mission now, he said, future
efforts require "all instruments of our national power, all instruments of
the international communities' national power." The solution is "more
diplomatic, more economic, more political than it is military," he
concluded.
 
 
Administration and Pentagon officials say the revamped campaign has grown
out of meetings of President George W. Bush's senior national security
advisers that began in January, and it reflects the evolution in Bush's own
thinking nearly four years after the Sept. 11 attacks.
 
 
Rumsfeld spoke in the new terms on Friday when he addressed an audience in
Annapolis, Maryland, for the retirement ceremony of Admiral Vern Clark as
chief of naval operations. Rumsfeld described America's efforts as it "wages
the global struggle against the enemies of freedom, the enemies of
civilization."
 
 
The shifting language is one of the most public changes in the
administration's strategy to battle Al Qaeda and its affiliates, and it
tracks closely with Bush's recent speeches emphasizing freedom, democracy
and the worldwide clash of ideas.
 
 
"It is more than just a military war on terror," Steven Hadley, the national
security adviser, said in a telephone interview. "It's broader than that.
It's a global struggle against extremism. We need to dispute both the gloomy
vision and offer a positive alternative."
 
 
The language shift also comes at a time when Bush, with a new appointment
for one of his most trusted aides, Karen Hughes, is trying to bolster the
State Department's efforts at public diplomacy.
 
 
Lawrence Di Rita, Rumsfeld's spokesman, said the change in language "is not
a shift in thinking, but a continuation of the immediate post-9/11
approach."
 
 
"The president then said we were going to use all the means of national
power and influence to defeat this enemy," Di Rita said. "We must continue
to be more expansive than what the public is understandably focused on now:
the military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq."
 
 
By stressing to the public that the effort is not only military, the
administration may also be trying to reassure those in uniform who have
begun complaining that only members of the armed forces are being asked to
sacrifice for the effort.
 
 
New opinion polls show that the American public is increasingly pessimistic
about the mission in Iraq, with many doubting its link to the
counterterrorism mission. Thus, a new emphasis on reminding the public of
the broader, long-term threat to the United States may allow the
administration to put into broader perspective the daily mayhem in Iraq and
the American casualties.
 
 
Douglas Feith, the under secretary of defense for policy, said in an
interview that if America's efforts were limited to "protecting the homeland
and attacking and disrupting terrorist networks, you're on a treadmill that
is likely to get faster and faster with time." The key to "ultimately
winning the war," he said, "is addressing the ideological part of the war
that deals with how the terrorists recruit and indoctrinate new terrorists."
 
 



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