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 You are in: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice > Former Secretaries of State > Former Secretary of State Colin L. Powell > Speeches and Remarks > 2004 > June 

Interview on CBS Face the Nation With Bob Schieffer and Doyle McManus

Secretary Colin L. Powell
Ankara, Turkey
June 27, 2004

(10:30 a.m. EDT)
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  And good morning again.  We are joined this morning by the Secretary of State Colin Powell, who is in Ankara, Turkey on the eve of the NATO summit.  We are also joined by Doyle McManus of the Los Angeles Times, who will join in the questioning.
 
Mr. Secretary, good morning. 
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  Good morning.
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Mr. Secretary, let me begin with this.  NATO seems prepared to train Iraqi security forces, but has not said that it is interested in sending troops to help with security.  Does this mean the United States is going to have to send more troops to Iraq?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  I don't believe that is the case.  We are always examining our troop level there to see if it's adequate, and I believe at the moment it's adequate.  But as the President said, he will give our commanders whatever they think they need.
 
I think there is a consensus within NATO to respond to what they were asked for from the new prime minister, Prime Minister Allawi.  He asked for training of security forces, police and military forces, and I think there is a growing consensus within NATO, which we will have a chance to see tomorrow, that NATO is ready to do that.
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Where is the training going to be done?  Inside Iraq or outside of Iraq?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  That hasn't been determined and that's one of the issues we'll be discussing at the NATO summit tomorrow.
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Let me ask you, General Casey, who is going to take over as the top commander in Iraq, has been saying that one of his first priorities is he's going to need 25,000 troops to protect the UN mission as it prepares for elections in Iraq.  If NATO doesn't send those troops, where are they going to come from?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  I would have to see exactly what General Casey said.  I think he speculated that more troops might be necessary for securing the countryside for the election process, but I don't know that he has made a specific request or was that concrete with respect to his estimate for additional troops.  And so I would have to wait till I see Secretary Rumsfeld tomorrow in Istanbul, where the NATO summit is being held, to see what his assessment is of the additional needs and, if there are needs that we have not planned for now, how we would meet those needs.
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  So, at this point, you can't rule out whether more U.S. troops will be needed or won't be needed?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  I cannot rule it out or rule it in.  General Casey was saying that he would make an assessment, see what's needed, and if he needs more he would ask for more.  But to the best of my knowledge, he has not made such a request yet because he hasn't arrived in theater yet to make the assessment that he described. 
 
MR. MCMANUS:  Mr. Secretary, one of the issues that's been bedeviling the Administration is the question of whether American forces can use torture or extreme methods in interrogations, whether that was going on at the Abu Ghraib prison.  Now, you've already taken a couple of diplomatic hits on that score.  You wanted a waiver at the UN for American troops and didn't get it.  The President had to sit and listen to European leaders, in effect, lecture him on the Geneva Convention.
 
Is that a problem when you meet with your European counterparts and is that a problem when you ask other NATO members to contribute troops to Iraq?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  Abu Ghraib was a big hit.  There's no question about it.  The President said so.  I have said so.  It's also absolutely clear that the President never, in any way, condoned the use of torture.  And I think what we're doing now is examining this entire matter from the ground up to see if instructions were not followed, to see where accountability should lie for what happened at Abu Ghraib.  What those soldiers did was unacceptable.  Why they did it will be the source of investigations and some of them are being court martialed now.
 
In my conversations with my European friends or other friends around the world, what I say to them is that we are devastated by what we saw at Abu Ghraib, but now watch what a democracy does when it has a problem like this.  How we use our laws to get to the bottom of this.  How we have a free media, how we have a Congress that is providing oversight to make sure that those responsible are brought to justice and held accountable.
 
With respect to the resolution at the UN earlier this week, we would have preferred to see a rollover for another year, but, frankly, Abu Ghraib made it difficult for some of the Security Council members to vote positively on that.  So we thought it would be better not to have a vote at all.
 
MR. MCMANUS:  And is the shadow of that issue one of the reasons that you've been getting pushback when you ask for more contributions to the troop strength in Iraq?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  No.  No, not really.  The pushback we're getting is the resistance that we've previously received.  Abu Ghraib didn't make it any harder or easier.  Keep in mind that there are some 16 NATO nations of the 26 nations in NATO that are involved in Iraq, and none of those nations stepped away and said they would leave Iraq either because of the increased violence as a result of the insurgency or Abu Ghraib.  They are all standing firm. 
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Mr. Secretary, The Washington Post says this morning that the CIA has suspended use of the unusual interrogation techniques like making people think they're going to be drowned and so forth.  We learned from that story that this memo that went out that the White House has now disavowed, saying that certain torture methods were okay, it apparently was vetted by the White House counsel, by people at the NSC, by Vice President Cheney's office.
 
I'm just wondering, did you ever see that memo?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  If this is the Justice Department memo you're referring to --
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Yes.
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  -- the 50-page memo.  No, I did not see it.  I think it was internal to the Justice Department and parts of the White House, but it was not distributed interagency for comment.  Our position on these issues is well known and is the subject of memos that we provided to the Justice Department and to the White House. 
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Mr. Secretary, this week, as you well know, polls show that for the first time a majority of the American people think that going into Iraq was a mistake.  Do you believe the public is losing support for this effort, and what do you say to people now as we near this handover date when we turn it over to the Iraqis? 
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  The first thing I'd say is it wasn't a mistake.  Saddam Hussein is gone.  We don't have to debate any longer as to whether or not there are or will be or were weapons of mass destruction.  They are gone.  He's gone.  It's not going to happen again.  He's not going to fill torture rooms.  He's not going to fill mass graves. 
 
And the Iraqi people now have the opportunity to build a new society with a new political system resting on a foundation of democracy and freedom.  And they are about to have their own leaders back in charge.  Leaders who have already demonstrated a great deal of courage and a commitment to putting in place the kind of country that we want to see, one that rests of the rule of law.  And Prime Minister Allawi has made it clear that he and his government will take all steps necessary to defeat this insurgency.  What we have to do is make sure that we give them our solid support.
 
The polls you're making reference to are -- the polls you're making reference to reflect an unease that's come about in recent weeks because of the strong insurgency that we have been seeing.  But we knew we would see this kind activity as we got close to the changeover date.  And we'll probably see it after the changeover date for a while until people realize that these insurgents are not attacking Americans any longer; they're now attacking their own government, they're attacking their own people.  Most of the people being killed and injured by these bombs are innocent Iraqis, or Iraqi police who are trying to protect the Iraqi people.  And I hope that when they see that they're attacking their own future, attacking their own government, the Iraqi people will start to respond accordingly and do everything they can to help their government defeat this insurgency. 
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Mr. Secretary, can I just pick up on one thing you said there?  You said Saddam is gone and the weapons of mass destruction are gone.  Are you convinced there are no longer any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, if there ever were?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  Well, we have not found any stockpiles.  We thought there were stockpiles there.  We have not found those stockpiles.  What we also knew was there, and there's no question about this, was an intention on the part of Saddam Hussein and his government to have such weapons.  They had them in the past and they maintained the capability to have them again in the future with dual-use facilities, with the infrastructure needed.  And I am absolutely convinced that if the international community had not acted, if the UN had simply just walked away and nobody acted, and they got rid of the sanctions they were under, then with Saddam Hussein still there and with that capability still there, we might well have seen stockpiles.  But we have not found stockpiles yet.  And I'm quite confident that this new government will in no way have such an intention and will in no way keep that kind of capability or want that kind of capability. 
 
MR. MCMANUS:  Mr. Secretary, you mentioned the increase in attacks from the insurgents in Iraq and your deputy, Richard Armitage, told Congress last week that the insurgents seem to be better coordinated and even more effective than before.  We've heard military experts say that part of the problem in the short term is that the insurgents seem to be getting better faster than the new Iraqi security forces are getting better.  Do you share that assessment, and should the American people, in effect, expect things to get worse for a while before they turn the corner and start to get better? 
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  Things are going to be tough for a while.  Whether they get worse or not, I don't know, but it's going to be a difficult time, Doyle, and it's going to take a while to build up Iraqi police forces and the Iraqi military again.  You just don't do it overnight.  And as you look at the insurgency and what it's been doing in recent weeks, as Secretary Armitage says, there does seem to be a level of coordination, a level of command and control within the insurgency that we have to target and go after.  We've got to get inside that command and control system, we've got to get inside their decision cycle, in order for us to be more effective in putting that insurgency down and in order for the Iraqis to be more effective in putting down the insurgency.
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  When did we come to the conclusion that there is a central command authority for these people?  Because for so long when this violence was going on we were told this was just an uncoordinated group of thugs and terrorists at work.  Now, Secretary Armitage says that was a mistake.  When did we come to the conclusion that it was a coordinated thing that's going on there, Mr. Secretary?
 
SECRETARY POWELL:  I don't think that Secretary Armitage said it was a mistake.  I think that earlier we did not see the kind of coordination that we're seeing now where the attacks are larger.  You know, earlier it was just an occasional roadside bomb or a regular roadside bomb. But now we're seeing a higher level of coordination.  So that means that they have been spending time getting themselves organized and it just changes the nature of the enemy.  We've got to go after it.
 
I don't want to leave the impression, however, that everything that is happening in Iraq from the insurgent side is all part of one organization.  Part of it is related to the Zarqawi organization.  There may be other organizations.  Whether they are all linked together or not remains to be seen.  I wouldn't go that far.  But certainly we're seeing a level of command and control and a level of coordination that, it seems to me, is a little bit different than what we were seeing some months ago.
 
MR. SCHIEFFER:  Mr. Secretary, I know you have to catch a motorcade.  Thank you for joining us.
 
All right, the Secretary of State.  And I think that I misspoke myself at the beginning of the interview.  I said that General Casey, the new commander who is headed to Iraq, wants 25,000 more troops to protect the UN mission there.  I believe what he told Congress was he's looking for a brigade, about 5,000 troops.  Others in Central Command say it may take five times that many, 25,000.
 
2004/718



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