Bush: 'We Will Not Step Back From Our Pledge'
President Addresses Iraq, Sept. 11 At Rare News Conference
President George W. Bush says that the United States is
committed to the June 30 deadline for turning over sovereignty to
the Iraqi people.
In a rare prime-time news conference Tuesday night, Bush said, "We will not step
back from our pledge."
To step back from that pledge now, Bush said, would leave the
Iraqi people feeling betrayed.
Nevertheless, the president said, these past few weeks have been
"tough." Bush said there has been "serious violence," with
remnants of Saddam Hussein's regime, Islamic militants and
terrorists from other countries banding together with one common
goal.
The president said groups attacking coalition troops "want to
run us out of Iraq" and destroy the "democratic hopes of the
Iraqi people." But Bush said U.S. troops will finish the work they
started.
President Bush was asked about his agreement
to be interviewed jointly with Vice President Cheney by the
9/11 Commission.
The president said it will be "a good chance for both of us to
answer questions" from the commission. But he turned aside a
reporter's questions about why he plans to speak to the commission
with the vice president, instead of separately.
On the topic of U.S. troops, the president said they will remain
in Iraq "as long as necessary and not one day more."
But he wouldn't say when the troops will leave.
Bush said Iraqis
want security, so U.S. troops will "need to be there for a while."
And he says if commanders in Iraq need more troops, they'll get
them.
Bush said U.S troops need to continue to train Iraqi troops. He
expressed disappointment with the way some of them have performed in
recent weeks.
In response to a question about the attitude of the Iraqi people
toward U.S. troops, the president said "they're really pleased" to
be rid of Saddam Hussein. But he acknowledges they don't want to be
occupied, and said he wouldn't want to be, either.
The president also said he wants to know where those weapons of
mass destruction are, but he continues to maintain that Saddam was
a threat, "so we dealt with him."
Asked by a reporter about critics who liken
the situation in Iraq to Vietnam, President Bush said, "I think
the analogy is false. I also think the analogy sends the wrong
message to our troops and sends the wrong message to the enemy."
The president said "we must stay the course because the end
result is in our nation's interest."
The news conference came amid broadcast reports that mutilated bodies found near Fallujah, Iraq, are those of some of the seven missing American civilian contractors. The State Department confirmed four mutilated bodies were found but offered no identification. (Full Story.)
The East Room session was only the third of Bush's presidency in prime time. And it was the first to be announced a day ahead of time.
Distributed by Internet Broadcasting Systems, Inc. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.









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