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BEIJING, June 27 -- US Defence Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld said Sunday more violence in Iraq could go on for a number of years.
He said that defeating the insurgency may take as long as 12 years, with Iraqi security forces, not U.S. and foreign troops, taking the lead and finishing the job.
In a deadly week for U.S. forces, an ambush on a
convoy carrying female troops killed four Marines. Statistics from AP indicate
at least 1,735 members of the U.S. military have died since the war started in
March 2003.
Rumsfeld said insurgents want to disrupt the
democratic transformation as Iraqi leaders draft a constitution and plan for
elections in December to choose a full-term government.
A British newspaper reported Sunday that American
officials recently met secretly with Iraqi insurgent commanders north of Baghdad
to try to negotiate an end to the bloodshed.
Speaking generally, Rumsfeld said those kinds of
meetings "go on all the time" and that Iraqis "will decide what their
relationships with various elements of insurgents will be."
The contacts, the Pentagon leader said, were intended
to make it easier for the Shiite-led government to reach out to minority Sunnis.
Rumsfeld said Iraq's security forces have gained
respect among Iraqis. He suggested insurgents' ability to kill in large numbers
did not indicate a decline in public support of US and Iraqi governments'
efforts. Nor that political, economic and security progress has been
lacking.
(Source: CRIENGLISH.com) |