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BEIJING, May 11, (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. President Bush examined new photos and video clips of American soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners Monday, reacting with "deep disgust and disbelief" during a Pentagon visit in which he underscored his support for embattled Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
The president spent the morning in damage-control
mode at the Pentagon, where he convened an extraordinary gathering of top
military, diplomatic, legal and intelligence advisers.
Seeking to douse speculation about Rumsfeld's future,
Bush stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the secretary ¡ª along with Vice President
Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell, CIA Director George Tenet and
other civilian and military officials ¡ª to offer a testimonial before television
cameras. Then Bush went behind closed doors to view about two-dozen video clips
and photos showing U.S. soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners.
White House and Pentagon officials went out of their
way to let it be known that Bush saw pictures the public had not, part of an
effort to position the president ahead of the unfolding election-year
controversy. Until Monday, Bush had seen only pictures obtained by the news
media ¡ª a state of affairs that led him to scold Rumsfeld last week.
Rumsfeld's spokesman, Larry Di Rita, called the
images "disturbing," and said they showed humiliation of prisoners as well as
"inappropriate behavior of a sexual nature." They were consistent with what has
been seen in photographs published around the world in recent days, Di Rita
said.
"The president's reaction was one of deep disgust and
disbelief that anyone who wears our uniform would engage in such shameful and
appalling acts," White House spokesman Scott McClellan said. "It does not
represent our United States military and it does not represent the United States
of America."
Bush said in his public remarks, "The conduct that
has come to light is an insult to the Iraqi people and an affront to the most
basic standards of morality and decency."
The Pentagon has not yet decided whether to make the
videos public, and White House officials repeatedly sidestepped questions about
the president's opinion on that subject. Bush twice ignored reporters' questions
about the matter.
McClellan did say the administration was seeking a
way to share them with Congress, so lawmakers can "carry out their oversight
responsibility."
A highly unusual gathering of Bush officials at the
Pentagon illustrated the gravity of the prison-abuse controversy. It was a
meeting first proposed several weeks ago, but one that gained urgency over the
weekend, when several additional officials, including Cheney, were told to
report.
Rumsfeld's executive dining room was transformed into
a TV studio for the president to address a bank of cameras, a handful of
journalists and a gaggle of top aides.
Rumsfeld stood on one side of Bush, Cheney on the
other. Cheney left the Pentagon ahead of Bush to campaign in New Hampshire and
Maine.
Also on hand were Powell; National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice and her deputy, Stephen Hadley; White House chief of staff Andy
Card, CIA Director Tenet; Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff; Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs; John Negroponte, the
new U.S. ambassador to Iraq, and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz.
They sought to project unity at a time when the
prisoner-abuse matter has strained his team. Above all, Bush wanted to buck up
Rumsfeld, who faced new questions about his fitness to serve.
"You are courageously leading our nation in the war
against terror," Bush said. "You're doing a superb job. You are a strong
secretary of defense, and our nation owes you a debt of gratitude."
The defense secretary stood with his hands clasped
behind his back during Bush's remarks.
The Army Times, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper read by
a quarter-million troops around the world, said in an editorial that
responsibility for the abuse lies at the highest levels of the Pentagon,
including Rumsfeld and Myers. Both men are guilty of "professional negligence,"
the editorial said.
His voice still hoarse from three long days of
campaigning last week, the president also used the appearance to offer a
lengthy, favorable progress report on military operations in Iraq.
His remarks came on a day when the military reported
three more U.S. soldiers' deaths between Saturday and Monday.
Bush said twice that the United States is "on the
offensive," and used the phrase again in an interview with the Armed Forces
Radio and Television Service. He cited patrols and raids in Ramadi, Husabayah
and Karmah, and said Marines would "ensure that Fallujah ceases to become an
enemy sanctuary."
In the interview, Bush sought to bolster troops
worried that the scandal has tarnished their reputation worldwide.
"The actions of a few will not be allowed to stain
the honor of the mighty United States military," Bush said. Enditem
(China Daily/Agencies) |