<http://reuters.myway.com/article/20041224/2004-12-24T135045Z_01_L24698509_RTRIDST_0_NEWS-IRAQ-DC.html>

My Way News

Rumsfeld Tells U.S. Troops in Iraq They Can Win

Dec 24, 8:50 AM (ET)




 By Alister Bull

FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) - Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld paid a surprise
Christmas visit to Iraq on Friday, seeing victims of a suicide bombing at a
U.S. base in Mosul and troops who stormed the city of Falluja last month.

Having flown in amid great secrecy on trip that took in four cities and
wound up with commanders in Baghdad, he told them the war could be won
despite what seemed a bleak outlook to some.

Under fire at home but applauded by the troops, he assured them of his
"respect" and told them he was doing all he could to improve their
equipment -- a sensitive topic many asked about.

His trip began in Mosul, where he pinned a Purple Heart medal on one of
dozens wounded when a suicide bomber in Iraqi uniform blasted a mess tent
on Tuesday, killing 22 people, 18 of them Americans. It was the costliest
single incident for Americans since the start of the war.

The attack, which has hit Americans' trust in the very Iraqi forces they
hope to train to take over from them, highlighted the continued potency of
an insurgency that the assault on Falluja was supposed to quell before next
month's election.

Conceding prospects of victory might look grim -- he spoke of times "when
it looks bleak, when one worries how it's going to come out" -- Rumsfeld
said in Mosul: "There is no doubt in my mind this is achievable."

Outgoing Secretary of State Colin Powell told President Bush and British
Prime Minister Tony Blair last month that there were too few troops in
Iraq, the Washington Post said in a report likely to spark new debate on a
controversial issue.

Following a stop in Saddam Hussein's home town of Tikrit, Rumsfeld went on
to Falluja, where more than 80 U.S. Marines and more than 1,000 guerrillas
have been killed in the past six weeks. Three Marines were killed in the
area only on Wednesday.

He said: "This is a tough situation here in Iraq. It is dangerous, people
are being wounded, people are being killed."

FALLUJA ANGER

Despite 21 months of sustained offensive operations against diehard
nationalist remnants of Saddam's old guard and, now, Islamist fighters,
some of whom have come in from abroad, U.S. forces seem no nearer ending
violence in much of the country.

Tuesday's attack in Mosul, claimed by Islamist group Ansar al-Sunna, struck
at the heart of efforts to bring Iraqi forces on board and lent weight to
U.S. commanders' fears that many top militants fled Falluja before the
battle, some making for Mosul.

Also worrying ahead of an election that some in Saddam's once dominant
Sunni Arab minority decry as unfair, are signs of new resentment building
from the ruins of Falluja, a Sunni bastion, where people have been
trickling back to their homes.

A day after the first few official returnees were let in, people spoke with
anger of damage sustained. There was little sign of gratitude for American
efforts to dislodge militants.

Fighting continues in parts of the city, where U.S. aircraft were again in
action overnight. Guerrillas also struck police stations in Baquba, and
clashed with U.S. forces there.

Rumsfeld, who warned this week that the Jan. 30 election would not end
nearly two years of bloodshed, told about 200 Marines at a town hall-style
meeting: "The great sweep of human history is for freedom and you are on
the right side of that."

After he met Iraq's U.S.-backed interim president in Baghdad, Ghazi
al-Yawar said: "We want to think big. We know the situation is tough but I
have no doubt in my mind that we will succeed. It's just a matter of time."

SECRET VISIT

Rumsfeld said his trip to Iraq had been planned for a while but was kept
secret for security reasons and Tuesday's attack had not been a factor in
selecting Mosul for a visit.

"I am deeply grateful to all of you. You will look back in 10 or 20 or 30
years and know you were a part of something very important," Rumsfeld told
dozens of soldiers in Mosul.

"I respect you. I wish you all a merry Christmas."

He conceded that bloody anarchy in Mosul in recent weeks may have been
caused by guerrillas from Falluja: "I don't doubt for a moment that some of
these folks in Falluja went up to Mosul."

U.S. troops were on alert at bases across Iraq after the suicide bombing:
"I am concerned about ... copycat attacks," said Brigadier General Carter
Ham, the U.S. commander in Mosul.

"So we have to be on our best guard over the coming days, weeks and months
for that kind of threat," Ham told CNN.

He said the bomber probably wore an Iraqi uniform of the kind increasingly
common on U.S. bases as Americans train local forces that they hope will
allow them to go home.

The attack was a fresh nightmare for troops battling guerrillas bent on
disrupting the elections. They not only see increasingly sophisticated
ambushes while on patrol but now also face a deadly threat to bases where
they eat and sleep.

Ansar al-Islam taunted the Americans on its Web site: "First they said it
was a mortar or rockets, then they said it was a suicide operation with
local materials," the group said.

"Are they really this stupid that they still don't know how they've been
hit, or was it too painful to admit?"


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