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9/3/2002 Donald Rumsfeld, Gen.
Richard Myers DoD News Briefing http://www.defenselink.mil/Transcripts/Transcript.aspx?TranscriptID=3610 Rumsfeld:
General Myers? Myers: Well
good afternoon. And thank you, Mr. Secretary. While things
in Washington have in some respects been somewhat quiet during the traditional
summer lull, the war on terrorism has continued. In Afghanistan, coalition
forces over the past month have found several caches of weapons, to include
totaling five truckloads of 82mm mortar rounds, 107mm rockets, machine-gun
rounds, 105mm tank rounds, aerial rockets, and small-arms ammunition. We also
recovered some caches totaling three truckloads of RPG rounds, rockets with
fuses, heavy ammunition and anti-personnel, anti-tank mines. In other
operational news, on Saturday, August 31st, a U.S. patrol was attacked between
Jalalabad and Asadabad with a command- detonated mine. The explosion occurred
five meters in front of the convoy, but there were no U.S. casualties. And finally,
as we approach the one-year anniversary of the September 11th attacks, I'd like
to take this opportunity to recognize another outstanding group who have been
also very busy here in August and over the past year, and that's the civilian
contractors who have been working on renovation of the damaged wedge. I think
all of us here in the building and the armed forces around the world appreciate
what they've been doing this past year to make sure we're going to be ready for
September 11th. Thank you. Rumsfeld:
Since our last visit, I -- Dick Myers and I went down to Crawford, of course,
and met with the president and discussed a series of Defense Department-related
matters. I went from there to Fort Hood and had a very good visit with the
troops there. Later in the week I was able to visit Fort Irwin in California
and see an exercise that was taking place. I went to the Naval Station in San
Diego and visited the Naval Space Systems Command, among other things. Saw the
-- met the troops aboard the Bonhomme Richard and the Constellation; visited
the Naval Air Station at North Island, where I used to live during World War
II, which was enjoyable for me. And then, of course, we went up to Camp
Pendleton and had a session with the Marines. So it's been a good number of
stops during that period. I always find it's enormously helpful to me to have a
chance to visit with the troops and talk to them and respond to questions and
get a sense from them as to the things they're thinking about. And with that,
I'll be happy to respond to questions. Charlie? Q: Mr.
Secretary, much has been said and reported about alleged differences between
you and the vice president, on one hand, and Secretary Powell on the other, on
a possible preemptive invasion of Iraq to remove Saddam Hussein from power.
Secretary Powell indicated over the weekend that he is willing to -- in fact,
wants inspectors to go back into Iraq. Do you think that there's anything that
inspectors in Iraq could do to change this administration's policy to remove
Saddam Hussein from power for a regime change? Rumsfeld:
Well, with respect to the first part of the question, I came to this town in
1957 to work up on Capitol Hill, and I don't suppose there's been a year in the
period since that there haven't been stories just like the ones you're citing
here that there are differences of opinions. The truth of the matter is that
the president's national security team meets together frequently. We do so in
person, we do so on the phone. We have excellent discussions and it is a very
friendly, professional and constructive set of discussions that take place in
that process. I don't know
of differences that -- there are always differences of perspective, there are
differences of -- institutional differences from time to time. But the
president is the president. He is the one who ran for that office and was
elected to that office. He's the one who makes decisions and calibrations and
guidance, and he does it very well. I don't know quite why it is that it seems
so much easier for folks to personalize things rather than to go to substance. The subject
you raised second, with respect to inspections, is clearly a complicated set of
issues. And my understanding -- and I hate to even talk about this because
someone will contrast it with something that somebody else said that I haven't
read or seen and attempt to find a seam between what I'm going to say and what
somebody else may have said. But it obviously has been the position of this
administration to favor inspections. It is the Iraqis that ended the
inspections. That we all know. We protested when the Iraqis threw the
inspectors out. The Iraqis
made a conscious decision to tell the international community that the
arrangement that they had entered into at the end of the Gulf War involving
inspections, and the other undertakings with respect to not developing weapons
of mass destruction and the like -- they made a conscious decision at various
points to negate those agreements, to tell the international community that
they no longer would abide by them. And so the offense, if there is one, is
committed against the United Nations and the international community. Would it be
nice if they had not thrown the inspectors out? Yes, that would have been
preferable. Would it be preferable for inspectors to be able to have
any-time/any-place access so that at least some additional knowledge could be
gained? Sure it would. Are the Iraqis -- do they have a pattern of denying
that? Yes, they do. Q: Do you
think it's possible for inspectors to go in there -- you've repeatedly said you
don't -- do you think it's possible for inspectors to go in there and somehow
change this administration's push for a regime change in Baghdad? Do you think
it's possible? Rumsfeld: I
just simply don't know. Those are judgments that the president will have to
make. First of all, I think that the intrusiveness of any inspection regime
that would be sufficiently permissive to enable the rest of the world to know
that in fact the U.N. resolutions were being fulfilled and lived up to would be
such that it's unlikely for the folks there to agree to it. And I haven't seen
any inclination on their part to agree to anything except as a ploy from time to
time to muse over the possibility we might do this or we might do that and kind
of play the international community and the U.N. process like a guitar,
plucking the right string at the right moment to delay something. But it would
clearly have to be a -- for -- to fulfill the import of the U.N. resolutions
and the understandings that were agreed upon, it would require an inspection
regime of such intrusiveness that it -- at least thus far, it's unlikely, I
think, that those folks would be inclined to agree to even half of it. Q: Mr.
Secretary, if I could just follow up on -- the other thing that Colin Powell
said in that BBC interview over the weekend -- Rumsfeld: I
must confess, I did not see the full interview. I saw a snippet on television
and therefore am purposely not commenting on his statement, because I haven't
had a chance to read it. I'm just stating what the president has said and what
our policy has been and what I see to be our current policy. And anyone who
goes out of here thinking that there's some difference between anything I'm
saying and what Colin said I think is -- would be a total misunderstanding of
the situation. Q: I'm not
trying to draw a distinction between what you said, but I just want to point -- Rumsfeld:
Well, but I want to make sure everyone understood that. Q: I want to
point to something he said and then ask you what flows from that, which is, in
answer to the question from David Frost about whether the rest of the world
agreed that Saddam Hussein was, in fact, a clear and present threat, Powell
said, "I think the world has to be presented with the information, with
the intelligence that's available, that debate is needed within the
international community so that everybody can make a judgment about this."
And my question is, when might we see some of this intelligence, some of the
hard evidence about the threat from Saddam Hussein, other than the general
statements that have already been made? Rumsfeld:
Well, needless to say, I agree with what Colin said in the quote you just
indicated. I think those are decisions that the president will make. I believe
very strongly that we are living in a new security environment. The president
believes that and has said so. It is notably different; it's different in a
variety of different ways. And the debate
and discussion that's taking place in the world I think is a healthy one and a
good thing. And I think it'll be taking place -- it's taking place here in
Washington. It's taking place in other capitals. It very likely will take place
in the Congress, when Congress returns and begins to have the hearings that
they have indicated that they may very well have. And I know the president has
indicated that he wants to be cooperative and have administrative -- Q: But -- but
he -- Rumsfeld: --
witnesses participate in those. And one would think that it would be in that
context that the discussions about what the fact patterns are would be most
appropriately presented. Q: Well, let
me just ask you, is there hard evidence, are there -- I don't know --
intelligence, are there photographs, is there other intelligence, are you
assembling that kind of information so that when the appropriate time comes the
president will be able to make the case and convince the world? Rumsfeld:
Well, you're suggesting the president wants to make a particular case. But what
the president wants to do is to -- and will do, in his own time, is to provide
information that he feels is important with respect to any judgment he decides
to make. And he has not decided what judgments he may make. But he certainly
would underpin those judgments with factual information. Q: Tariq
Aziz said this morning -- he characterized you and several other people in the
Bush administration as warmongers, as using the issue of inspections as a
pretext to try to topple the regime. And he said he is willing to sit down and
talk about all of the issues involving Iraq. Do
you take that to be a serious offer? Do you take that to be further
maneuvering, as you indicated earlier? Rumsfeld: Well,
I have met with Tariq Aziz a number of times, both in Baghdad and in Washington
and elsewhere. (Pauses.) And clearly, he does the bidding of his master, Saddam
Hussein. They have over a good many years demonstrated a wonderful talent and
skill at manipulating the media. And they -- and international organizations,
and other countries. When it's the right moment to lean forward, they lean
forward. When it's the right moment to lean back, they lean back. And it's a
dance. It's a dance they engage in. They will
go week after week after week stiffing the international community, the U.N.
and others. They then will find that things are going in a way that they're
uncomfortable with, and then they will throw out an opportunity of one sort or
another and get people -- hopeful people leaning forward, saying, "See,
there's our opportunity. We do have a chance to work with those people. All we
need to do is be more accommodating to them." And therefore they'll swing
the discussion and the debate that way. There might be inspections. The
inspections might be this, that or the other thing. And then you'll find at the
last moment they'll withdraw that carrot or that opportunity and go back into
their other mode of thumbing their nose at the international community. Where they'll
be at any given moment is, of course, something that's entirely up to them. But
at least thus far we do know certain facts. We know that they have rejected
inspections. We know they have not lived up to their obligations under the U.N.
resolutions and the agreements that they signed at the conclusion of the Gulf
War. Q: Mr.
Secretary? Rumsfeld:
Yeah? Q: In your
view, what would be the merit of inspections if they in fact verified
disarmament and left Saddam Hussein in power? It would not seem to achieve your
goal or the administration's policy goal of removing him. Rumsfeld:
Again, that's a call for the president, really; it's not for me. The policy of
our government has been regime change. It's been regime change by the Congress,
by the successive executive branch over the past two administrations. And it
was rooted in several things. It was rooted in the conviction that the world
would be a better place if there were a government in that part of the world
that was not developing weapons of mass destruction, was not on the terrorist
list, did not pose threats to its neighbors, did not repress its people and
subject its minorities to abuses and did not have any development of weapons of
mass destruction. Therefore, inspections have a role with respect of one of
those elements, and obviously the world would be a better place if those folks
were not developing weapons of mass destruction. But the other elements of the
problem would remain. Q: Along that
line, Mr. Secretary, Vice President Cheney said last week that Iraq was once
close to producing or obtaining nuclear weapons, and said that they're getting
close again. What evidence does the U.S. have that Iraq, Saddam Hussein, may be
getting close again to obtaining a nuclear weapon? Rumsfeld: Oh,
I think I'll leave that for the coming days and weeks. I mean, we know the
obvious. We know that they were a lot closer than any of the experts had
estimated they would be with respect to a nuclear weapon, and that was
discovered during the post- 1991 period by actually seeing what was there. To
the extent inspectors have been out now for a number of years, we know that we
don't know what's taken place during those period of years. To the extent that
they have kept their nuclear scientists together and working on these efforts,
one has to assume they have not been playing tiddly-winks, that they have been
focusing on nuclear weapons. And so we know what we know. We know that
they have an enormous appetite, that they were very close, within a short
period of time, to having a weapon. We know that our estimate had been that it
was multiples of years compared to what it actually was; and therefore, we know
we weren't very good at what we were supposedly doing -- that is to say,
estimating that. And we also know that since the end of the Cold War, that the
proliferation of these technologies has been pervasive. And we know that they
have porous borders. And we know some other things, but those are the kinds of
things that would come out if and when the president decides that he thinks
it's appropriate. Q: If I could
follow up, when you said you'd leave that for the coming days and weeks, does
that mean the administration intends to in the coming weeks reveal some of this
evidence that maybe -- Rumsfeld:
Those are judgments that have to be made down the road depending what the
president decides he wants to do. Q: Mr.
Secretary, about the vice president's speech, twice last week he said that the
consequences of inaction against Saddam Hussein far outweigh the consequences
of some preemptive strike. Yet we repeatedly hear from the president that he
has not made a decision and that he's a patient man. In your assessment, is
there a mixed message here, or are we just reading it wrong? Rumsfeld:
Well, you know, any time four, five, six, seven people all talk and they talk
about these subjects and they are asked specific questions by people that are
cast in a certain way and the question contains a reference to something that
someone else said, not the full context of it, not the whole text, but some
blurb or piece that happened to appear on television or happened to appear in
the newspaper, and then somebody responds to that, why, it is -- there's no
question but that if every -- someone wanted to take all the column inches or
all the minutes on television by the top people in any government at any given
time on the same subjects and ignore how the question was asked and ignore the
context of the quote, that you could end up juxtaposing things in ways that
would sell newspapers, by saying, "Aha! There's a disagreement there. He
said this; she said that. What about this? What about that?" That's
baloney! These people meet together all the time. They know what each other
thinks. Do they sometimes say things one way, and someone else might have said
it some other, different way? Sure they do. But what's important is what the
president says. And what's important is what the president decides. And what's
important is the documentation that's provided at some point, if he decides
that he feels that's appropriate. And I think
also what's important is that people lift their eyes up off their shoelaces and
go back to the fundamental and the fundamental issue is that we live in a
different world today. We live in the 21st century. We're not back in the 20th
century, where the principal focus is conventional weapons. We're in the 21st
century, where the principal focus must be weapons -- unconventional weapons --
weapons potentially that could involve killing not hundreds of people but tens
of thousands of people -- chemical weapons, biological weapons, potentially
nuclear weapons. And that means
that we have to take that aboard as a people, and we have to talk about it, and
we have to consider it. What does it mean? How does it conceivably affect our
behavior? There are clearly risks to acting in any instance. But there are also
risks to not acting. And those have to be weighed. People have to talk about
them intelligently. These are important subjects for Congress, for the press,
for the academic institutions, for the world community. And that's what this
process is. And I keep
hearing people say, "Oh, Europe's unhappy with this" or
"Somebody doesn't agree with that" or "Some general said
this" or "Some civilian said that." I think what's important is
the substance of this discussion. And I see too little attention to it and too
much attention to the personality aspects of it, if you will, and to the trying
to juxtapose what one person said against what somebody else said for the personality
aspect of it, rather than for the substance of it. And if you think about our
circumstance, when the penalty for not acting is September 11th, if you will,
or a Pearl Harbor, where hundreds and a few thousand people are killed, that is
a very serious thing. You've made a conscious decision not to act. And the
penalty with that, for those people, it's a hundred percent. It's not one
thousand or two thousand, it's that person is gone. If, on the other hand, the
penalty for not acting is not a conventional or a terrorist attack of that
magnitude, but one of many multiples of that, it forces people to stop and have
the kind of debate we're having. What ought we to be thinking about? How ought
we, if at all, to be changing our behavior? How ought we to live in this new
21st century world? What does it mean that tens of thousands of human beings
can be killed in a biological attack if we allow it to happen as a society? Are
we comfortable with that? Is that something that we've decided that it's so disadvantageous
to take an action without proof that you could go into a court of law and prove
beyond a reasonable doubt that something was going to happen, that the
capabilities existed for -- of absolute certain knowledge, and that the intent
to use those was imminent and clear, and you don't -- you may not have the type
of certain knowledge. You may want that kind of knowledge in a law enforcement
case, where we're interested in protecting the rights of the accused. You may
have a different conclusion if you're talking about the death of tens of
thousands or hundreds of thousands of innocent men, women and children. We're
not talking about combatants here, we're talking about the kinds of people who
were killed on September 11th. So it is that construct that needs to be
considered. And it ought to be -- it ought to be talked about and well read
through and thought about, it seems to me. Q: Mr.
Secretary -- Q: You -- you
said just now that one of the reasons Saddam is so dangerous is because he's
threatening his neighbors. Now the very neighbors say that they don't feel
threatened today because of containment and they oppose a military
intervention. So what do you say to them? Rumsfeld:
Well, I suppose -- first of all, it depends on who you're talking to, and it
depends on when you're talking to them, and it depends on whether you're
talking in public or in private. All anyone has to do is go back and read the
statements that Saddam Hussein has made about the "illegitimacy",
quote-unquote, the alleged "illegitimacy" of his neighboring regimes,
and the hostility he feels towards them. So it seems to me the truth is
self-evident. Yes? Q: Mr.
Secretary, you mentioned Congress several times, as you already have said,
that's coming back today and tomorrow. And of course you and the president have
also said that you believe Congress should be consulted. But do you think it's
prudent that you should seek the consent of Congress? Do you think it's a wise
idea for Congress to approve an action before it might be decided? Rumsfeld: The
-- under our Constitution, Article 1 is the Congress of the United States, the
people's branch. They're there for a reason, and there is no question but that
they have a role. What that role is, is a subject for lawyers; how they want to
execute it is a subject for Congress; how the president wants to interact with
them is a subject for the executive branch. And that will all play out over the
coming days and weeks. But there's no question but that the Congress has an
important role, in my view. Q: But not
just legally whether they should give their consent, but is -- politically is
prudent? And I would also wonder what General Myers thinks -- would it be
valuable to have the consent of Congress, not just whether -- Rumsfeld: I
think I've answered it as well as I can. I think that the exact formula that
the president or the Congress prefers to take is something that will evolve in
the coming days. With respect to the first part of the question, unambiguously,
the Congress has a role. It's for them and the president to define it. Q: Mr.
Secretary? Q: General
Myers, General Zinni, about 10 days ago, made a speech in which he said that
the people who are most enthusiastic about taking action in Iraq have not
themselves been in combat, or something to that effect, and that generals, as a
group, tend to see it differently. And he even listed a few, most of them
retired, actually. Do you have
any thoughts about -- I'm sure you've seen what he said. Do you have any
thoughts about what he said? Myers: I've
only seen what was reported that he said in the paper. I've not seen his actual
remarks. And so it's hard to comment. He made his remarks -- I think I've stood
up here before and talked about the Joint Chiefs of Staff and others involved
in all our processes in this war on terrorism, and that I don't think -- I
think people tend to read things into statements that really don't reflect the
true nature of the deliberations and advice we're providing. But, I don't
know what else to say about it. Everybody's entitled to their opinion. Q: But do the
responsibilities of -- you know, for military officers mean that they have any
different perspective in this instance than civilian leadership might have? Myers: Well, I
think in some cases it may be slightly different, but not different than the
civilian leadership of the department. I don't know anybody that cares more
passionately about the people of this department than the secretary and the
deputy secretary and those civilian leaders. So in one sense, no, and in
another sense, in terms of just pure military expertise, I think the military
brings something to the equation that's valuable, and we do so in a very
unconstrained way. Q: General
Myers, a couple of days ago there was a story reporting that many military
officers in the Pentagon are concerned that if we mounted a military operation
against Iraq, it would be a huge distraction and drain on resources from the
search for al Qaeda and the greater war on terrorism. Is that an issue that you
and other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are discussing? Is that a
serious issue? Myers: An
issue that we discus and that the staff works almost continuously is how U.S.
armed forces are used around the world. For those parts of the force that are
under particular stress, what steps can we take to mitigate it? If we're asked
to do something else, whatever that is, are we prepared to do that? Do we have
the logistics? Do we have the command and control structure? Do we have the
people? Do we have the right skill sets? And if not, then how do we -- that's
something we talk about all the time. We talk about that with the secretary. We
don't just talk about it, but the secretary probes us to respond to lots of
those types of questions. So that is not unusual -- that that goes on. It goes
on -- it went on before September 11th. It's -- it'll go on as we continue this
war. Q: Well, but
would a major regional conflict be a serious drain on the resources that are
being devoted to the war on terrorism, or is the war on terrorism using so few
of those resources that there are plenty left? Myers: Let me
just say it this way: that if you go back to the Quadrennial Defense Review, in
the defense strategy that was laid out in that review, it says we want our
forces to be able to do a series of things. And in that series of things, we
cover the cases that you just mentioned -- the war on terrorism, another major
regional conflict, and we think we can do that. And we've looked at that
several times, and I've stood up here and I've said that we have the resources
to do -- now does that -- to do what we need to do. Does that mean
we're not going to have to prioritize, that there won't be certain resources
that will be -- could possibly be in scarce demand, given different scenarios?
Well, sure. But that's what we do. We do that even today. So -- Rumsfeld: Plus
homeland security, which Dick might have mentioned, plus some other, lesser
contingencies, such as Bosnia and the other things we're doing. Myers: Yeah.
It's not just a war on terrorism; it is -- as the secretary said, it's -- if
you go back and read the QDR and take the -- I don't want to go through that
now. But if you take the defense strategy out of that, which does include
homeland security for the first time as a mission that we need to put resources
towards and which we're doing in a fairly major way that we have not done in
the past, at least accounted for them -- we put forces toward it, but we never
accounted for them -- I think we have a great strategy with a very good way to
account for how busy people are going to be. Q: Mr.
Secretary, could I just ask you quickly, would you feel that you have failed in
your job if you left office and Saddam Hussein was still in power? Rumsfeld: No.
Look -- (laughs) -- it is an interesting question. I haven't thought about it
that way. But there is a constitution, and the president is the president, and
the president and the Congress make those kinds of judgments; secretaries of
Defense do not. I have a set
of statutory responsibilities. And I have obligations to the president, and I
have obligations to the Congress under their statute, and I have various
international responsibilities. And to the extent I do them in a manner that is
consistent with the best interests of our country, then I'm happy and feel that
I've been successful. And to the extent that I ever felt that something was
being done in a way that I did not feel in the best interests of the country,
it would be my obligation to step aside. But that -- I don't feel that way at
all. I feel we've got a very orderly process that is benefiting from 24 hour,
seven day a week examination by everybody in the world, to look for flaws and
little things on it that might be questioned or elaborated on. And that's fine,
too. That's all part of the Constitution, too. Pam? Q: Following
the heightened sensitivity to the threat since September 11th and linear and
perhaps logical inferences about Saddam Hussein's pursuit of weapons of mass
destruction, is there any concrete difference in the threat posed by Saddam
Hussein in Iraq today than there was, say, one year ago today? Rumsfeld:
Well, without putting an adjective to it, the short answer is yes, there is a
difference today from a year ago. When you're dealing with any entity -- let's
call it the moon -- that -- (laughter) -- give credit -- give credit where's
credit's due -- where there -- where you know of certain knowledge that the
moon has in the past had weapons of mass destruction capabilities and that the
moon has been continuing free of inspections and with relatively open borders,
with a great deal of dual use capabilities, has been proceeding aggressively to
further develop those capabilities and make them more mature, more robust, with
greater lethality, greater distances and greater variety, then one has to say
that the situation has changed, and not for the better. Q: Mr.
Secretary -- or either one of you -- could you help us put just a couple of
newspaper accounts into perspective? One is the New York Times story today that
suggests some Special Operations commanders, having concluded on their own that
bin Laden is dead, would like to see their Special Operations forces doing more
special things somewhere else. The other one was in this Israeli newspaper, a
report over the weekend that says Syria has allowed 150 to 200 al Qaeda,
including, perhaps, some top leadership, to locate in a Palestinian refugee
camp near Sidon, in Lebanon. Can you help us put those two stories into
perspective, maybe? General Myers,
maybe you could take the first one. It's up to you. Myers: In
terms of the question about Special Operations Command and any analysis, to my
knowledge and to the knowledge of the commander of Special Operations Command,
there's been no analysis done by anybody in his command on whether or not I
think the story went that bin Laden was killed in Tora Bora. I don't think
there's -- there's nothing to back up the fact that that's been analyzed to any
degree that I'm aware of or that General Holland is aware of. To the rest of
the story, I mean, I don't know. I -- depends who you talk to. I suppose
everybody's got ideas. The one thing
that we have to keep in mind, though, is that as -- we found the adversary, in
this case al Qaeda, being very adaptive, very flexible. And as we pursue one
line of tactics and techniques and procedures in operating against them, they
will -- they will change, and they'll morph into some other capability. And
we've got to be able to react to that. And I think clearly, I would expect the
folks in the field to understand that, and we understand it, as well. So there
are always opportunities to change the way we're doing business or change
priorities, and it's something we do routinely. We've done it since September
11th; we'll continue to do that. Q: Mr.
Secretary, what about al Qaeda in Lebanon? Rumsfeld: I
don't think I care to get into it. We do know that al Qaeda are all over the
world. They're in 40 or 50 countries, unquestionably. They have dispersed, in
many cases out of Afghanistan, where there were high concentrations. But to be
perfectly straightforward, they also dispersed before we went to Afghanistan.
They trained thousands of terrorists in those training camps in Afghanistan and
dispersed them around the world even before the beginning of kinetics on
October 7th of last year. So they are in
a lot of countries. I don't doubt for a minute that if they're in that many
countries, they're in a third of the countries of the world, so you can name
any number of countries where they might be. Q: Follow-up
on the Special Forces. To either of you, is there a plan or consideration being
given to a wider role for Special Forces in the overall war on terrorism? What
might that entail? And would that overlap somewhat into what are traditionally
law enforcement obligations? Rumsfeld:
Well, let me just start in on it. Number one, Special Operations -- you're
talking Special Forces or Special Operations? Q: Special
Operations. Rumsfeld:
Special Operations are in limited supply. And clearly, in the global war on
terrorism they have a role that is different and more extensive than they might
in a more conventional conflict. So we need to see that we have the right
numbers and in the right places, working on the right problems. To the extent they're
in places that it's not useful or doing things that are less useful, one would
obviously find ways to replace them from those functions and have them do the
higher priority activities. One of the
things we've done early on, of course, was for the first time in history to get
the Marine Corps to develop a closer relationship with Special Operations
people and allow Marines to be drawn into that pool. So we've expanded the size
of the pool. Another thing
we've decided to do, some weeks or months ago, was to recognize that there is a
seam between what conventional forces do and what Special Operating forces
might do, and to find ways to have people in the more conventional force
activities move slightly over and be able to pick up earlier some activities
that previously or maybe initially had been done by Special Operating forces,
and have, therefore, a way for the Special Operating forces to be somewhat --
freed up somewhat earlier. And we've been looking at a host of things like
that. With respect
to law enforcement -- doubtful. I mean, law enforcement is law enforcement.
Certainly in the United States we have people that do that. With respect to
other countries, what is law enforcement, it varies from country to country how
they're organized, how they're equipped, what their laws require. In friendly
countries, to the extent they have good law enforcement capabilities, we always
prefer to use that, their capabilities. To the extent they don't have good law
enforcement capabilities or they don't have good special-operations
capabilities, we have a pattern of trying to help train them and assist them
and maybe give them some intel if they're friendly countries. If they're
unfriendly countries, then -- like Afghanistan -- then we do something else. Q: But you've
described this as an unconventional war on terrorism. Does that mean that
America's unconventional forces may have to become even more unconventional
themselves and perhaps go covertly into countries where we have not declared
war or they are not invited? Rumsfeld: I
don't know that we -- our thinking has evolved in a way that I'd want to get
into that. Yes? Q: Mr.
Secretary and General Myers, you started off by kind of giving us your progress
report on the war on terrorism in Afghanistan, but it doesn't appear that we
have done much in finding large numbers of al Qaeda or Taliban recently, and
our troops seem to be becoming the target. You know, we may be the hunted
rather than the hunter. Are we shifting into an uncomfortable stage in that conflict? Rumsfeld: I
don't think the question's accurate, first of all. We may not be finding large
numbers, but that's because we've been successful, not unsuccessful. We've been
successful in dispersing large numbers wherever they were, and what's left are
bits and scraps. And we've been arresting and detaining people in Afghanistan
almost every week. I keep looking at the number of detainees, and the number's
going up, not down. So it seems to me that your assessment is not correct. Second, you
say they're targeting Americans. There's no question but that Taliban and al
Qaeda would like to target Americans, not just in Afghanistan but in the United
States and other countries around the world. And periodically, they'll be
successful. And it's our task to see that we keep them on the move and keep
them on the run. Afghanistan is
essentially in a circumstance that it's moved from being a country occupied by
the Taliban and the al Qaeda to a country that is now governed by a
transitional government under Mr. Karzai. It is not a perfectly tidy place, but
it is a very stable place, for the most part, around the country. The
southeastern area, area southeast of Kabul, is clearly not stable. And there
are competing warlords in that area. Does that mean
people aren't going to get killed from time to time? No. They will. Does it
mean there aren't going to be land mines from time to time? Of course there
will be. It's a country that's been at war for decades. There are more land
mines in that country than there are people. There -- it's one of the most
heavily armed populations on the face of this earth. And you're
quite right; every once in a while, a rocket gets fired off, or an RPG gets
fired off, or someone gets shot at and -- by someone who's a Taliban or an al Qaeda
in the local area. But on the
other hand, four, five, six times a day locals are coming up to the U.S. forces
in that country and saying, "Look, come here. There's some bad guys over
here. We'll point them out to you. There's a cache of weapons in here."
And they'll find hundreds and hundreds of weapons. We find caches of weapons
that -- not because we're geniuses, but because people come and tell us,
"There they are. Look! Pick them up. Get them out of here. We don't want
them here." People are going to school. I think your
question was, you know, seriously flawed. (Laughter.) Q: Mr.
Secretary -- Rumsfeld: But
that question was to Dick. Myers: Nice
answer, sir. Rumsfeld:
(Laughs.) (Laughter.) Myers: We'll
stick with this. Q: Can we get
a clarification here, real quickly -- just a clarification? You said that
Special Ops troops -- they may be moved around to higher-priority things. Is
one of the less useful jobs the hunt for bin Laden, even though the fact is
that you still operate under the assumption that he is alive? Rumsfeld:
Look, the senior al Qaeda and the senior Taliban are still people we'd like to
find. And to the extent we should use law enforcement, we do. Should we --
extent we use the agency, we do. To the extent we use Special Forces or Special
Ops, we do. That list of
-- whatever it is at any given time -- 12, 15, 20, 25 people are still of
interest. One has to assume that these folks have knowledge, training, access
to bank accounts, access to individuals who were trained and may be in sleeper
cells, and that to the extent there are going to be additional terrorist acts,
that one or more of them have a reasonable probability of being involved in it.
Therefore, they are of interest. Q: Have you
seen evidence that gold is being transferred to the Sudan in any quantity from
al Qaeda coffers? Rumsfeld: Not
that I know of. Q: General
Myers, you very carefully indicated earlier -- or you just sort of avoided
specifically addressing the issue of stress on Special Operations. They are
stressed now, are they not, because of the many different things that are being
asked of that command? And that is a concern, is it not, of the Joint Chiefs as
more and more things are asked of this particular specialized soldier? Myers: We have
a lot of forces really busy. The Special Operations Command has lots of forces
that are very, very busy. In fact, they're in, you know, about 140 countries,
143 countries a year. So they're continually out there with our allies and
partners in training exercises and so forth. Like any
force, some parts of it are more stressed than others -- let me just say that
-- and that they have to be carefully husbanded more than others. But it's not
true as a general statement to say Special Operations Command is stressed at
this point. There are pieces of it that are stressed. But you can go to any
community in armed forces, you can pick out pieces of it that are working very
hard right now just because of the nature of the requirements. Q: General
Myers, are they still operating in Yemen? Are they still doing training or some
other kind of cooperative anti-terror activity in Yemen? Myers: Yes,
they are. Q: Is it the
training part or is it some new effort? Myers: Let me
check on that. We'll get back to you on exactly. I know some training is
finished, and I just need to find out what's -- Q: Mr.
Secretary, don't you feel a little bit foolish about lecturing -- Rumsfeld: No!
(Laughter.) Well what's the question? Q: Don't you
feel a bit foolish about lecturing the press about the "frenzy" over
Iraq when you went and spoke to the troops who might have to fight there, and
that was the first thing they wanted to know about, and Vice President Cheney
came out and made two hard-hitting speeches on Iraq? In retrospect, don't you
think maybe that subject wasn't entirely just a press-generated frenzy? Q: Now we're
going to be here -- (off mike) -- (laughter) -- Rumsfeld: Did
I use the word "frenzy"? THE PRESS:
Yes! Q: Many times. Q: You said it
to the president as well. Q: Caught on
tape. Q: You said it
to the president. Q: The
president repeated your word. Rumsfeld:
Well, let me have an agonizing reappraisal here for -- (laughter). Or as one
used to say, let me look down the long tunnel of retrospect and see how I feel
about that today. (Pauses.) No, I don't
feel even the slightest foolish, I mean, really, really. Not even close. What
is the right word for what's been going on? I don't know. I have been, as an
idealist, always hopeful that the issue would be seized, discussed in a
thoughtful, constructive way. And I have been discouraged, but not surprised, I
suppose, that it tends to always get tugged down to be particularized. It tends
to be constantly cast in personalities. And -- do I fault the press? Never!
(Laughter.) Could I have found a better word than "frenzy"? Maybe.
"Feeding frenzy" would be -- no that would be wrong, too. (Laughs.) I
don't know what the right word would be. But it --
there's no question but that this world of ours is living in a different time.
This country of ours is. And the people deserve to have some time and
reflection on what are critically important issues. And they ought to have the
benefit of being able to think them through. The Congress, the American people,
other countries, they ought to have the benefit of being able to think them
through without being constantly blown from side to side with trivia and
irrelevancies and misinformation by the juxtapositioning of one person's
statement against another person's statement. Maybe "frenzy" isn't
the right word, but I have seen some darned good commentary on television, and
I have seen some excellent articles in the press. So I don't mean to paint a
brush over this. I really don't. But I think this is important. And I think it
is being excessively simplified, personalized, and in some instances,
trivialized. Now, have I
gotten myself into deeper water? Q: Yes. Q: We'll get
back to you on that. (Laughter.) |