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2007 PRESS RELEASES

Rice Begins Middle East Trip with Surprise Stop in Baghdad

Secretary says security push creates breathing space for progress

Baghdad,Iraq
February 17, 2007
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice talks with the Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki


Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice talks with the Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in Baghdad, Iraq, February 17. (© AP Images)



The joint U.S.-Iraqi security push against militant factions in Baghdad is bringing “a new hope and a new optimism” to the Iraqi capital, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said during a previously unannounced stop there as she begins a round of visits in the Middle East.

Rice made her comments to reporters February 17, after meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and other government officials.

Press reports quoted the secretary as cautioning that success in the long run will depend on how effectively the Iraqi government uses any period of relative calm that the crackdown provides.

“If, in fact, militias decide to stand down and stop killing innocent Iraqis … that can’t be a bad thing,” the Associated Press quoted Rice as saying. “But how the Iraqis use the breathing space that that might provide is what’s really important.”

The Washington Post said Rice expressed hope that any respite could give “a little bit of a spur” to Iraqi efforts to meet political and economic benchmarks.

Earlier, Rice had met with U.S. embassy and military personnel in Baghdad’s Green Zone.

Rice declared then that “this mission, bringing a stable and secure Iraq, is also essential for the security of the United States of America.”

After the terrorist strikes on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, she continued, “we decided that we had to go on the offense” to stave off further attacks.

“And that meant coming to the source of the problem here in the Middle East and … trying to actually bring about a different kind of Middle East,” she said.

The secretary acknowledged disagreements at home over war policy, but stressed to her audience that there is no disagreement whatever over the honorable role they are playing.

“[S]ome do not think that this was the right war to fight, and others think that we in the administration haven’t fought this war quite right,” Rice said. But, she added, “[W]hen you hear the criticism of the war or the criticism of the President or of me or of anybody else, I do want you to know that to a person at home, your honor and your sacrifice and your labor is appreciated ... I don’t care what people think of the policies; …[what you’re doing is] appreciated across the board.”

Rice rejected the thought that “the American people don’t want to fight this war anymore.”

“The American people want to know that we can succeed. Because they, too, want to succeed. And so we will have our discussions and our debates at home, but Americans want to win this war,” she said.

“They want to leave an Iraq that is better than the one they found. They want to leave an Iraq that is going to be a pillar of a stable Middle East.”

Rice’s stopover in Baghdad preceded planned visits to Jerusalem, the Palestinian Territories and Amman, Jordan. She is scheduled to meet jointly in Jerusalem February 19 with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Her current trip is to end with a visit to Berlin, where the Quartet for Middle East peace will discuss steps to be pursued in implementing the “road map” to an Israeli-Palestinian settlement. The Quartet includes the European Union, Russia, the United Nations and the United States.


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