|
|
 US Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld testifies before the Senate Armed Services Committee on
Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. Rumsfeld on Thursday rejected the notion
that the United States is losing the Iraq war and said it would be a
mistake to set a timetable for a possible withdrawal of American
troops.(Xinhua/AFP)
|
WASHINGTON, June 23 (Xinhuanet) -- US Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on Thursday rejected the notion that the United States
is losing the Iraq war and said it would be a mistake to set a timetable for a
possible withdrawal of American troops.
"Any who say that we've lost this war, or that we're
losing this war, are wrong. We are not," Rumsfeld told the Senate Armed Services
Committee.
Rumsfeld rejected the assertion by Senator Edward
Kennedy, a Democrat from Massachusetts, that the United States is in "a
seemingly intractable quagmire" in Iraq.
"First let me say that there isn't a person at this
table who agrees with you that we're in a quagmire and that there's no end in
sight," Rumsfeld said. General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, and General George Casey, the top US commander in Iraq, agreed with the
defense secretary.
Several polls conducted recently have indicated that
the American publican are losing patience on Iraq. In one poll, nearlysix in 10
Americans say the United States should withdraw some or all of its troops from
Iraq, the most downbeat view of the war since it began in March 2003.
A small bipartisan group in Congress proposed a
resolution lastweek calling on President George W. Bush to develop a plan by the
end of this year to start bringing home American troops from Iraq by Oct. 1,
2006.
But Rumsfeld said setting a deadline for a US
withdrawal would be "a mistake." "It would throw a lifeline to terrorists who in
recent months have suffered significant losses in casualties, beendenied havens,
and suffered weakened popular support," he said. "Time in war is never
predictable," he added. Enditem |