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By

Lucy Madison /

CBS News/ December 14, 2010, 10:24 AM

Holbrooke's Last Words: "You've Got to Stop this War in Afghanistan"

Richard Holbrooke

U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke (R) stands next to U.S. General Stanlely McChrystal (L), head of the U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, before the arrival of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on November 18, 2009 in Kabul, Afghanistan.

/ CBS

Updated: 5:46PM ET

In his final words before emergency heart surgery, Richard Holbrooke, the influential U.S. diplomat who died on Monday following complications from the surgery, apparently urged an end to America's nine-year old Afghanistan conflict.

"You've got to stop this war in Afghanistan," Holbrooke apparently told  doctors before entering into surgery, according to family members' accounts originally reported by  Washington Post.

Later reports note that Holbrooke made the comments during "painful banter" leading up to his surgery -- and that they were not necessarily "a serious exhortation about policy."

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters on Tuesday that the remarks were part of a lengthy back-and-forth between Holbrooke and his doctors, who were trying to calm him down before the surgery.

"At one point the medical team said: You've got to relax. And Richard said: I can't relax; I've got -- I'm worried about Afghanistan and Pakistan," Crowley relayed, according to ABC News. "And then after some additional exchanges, you know, the medical team finally -- finally said: Tell you what; we'll try to fix this challenge while you're undergoing surgery. And he said: Yeah, see if you can take care of that, including ending the war."

"Number one, he always wanted to make sure he got the last word," Crowley said, of Holbrooke. "And secondly, [the exchange] just showed how he was singularly focused on pursuing an advancing the -- you know, the process and the policies in Afghanistan and Pakistan to bring them to a successful conclusion," he said. 

Holbrooke, a 69-year-old foreign policy veteran who worked in Vietnam as a foreign service member during the war and advised four Democratic presidents, had been serving until his death as special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan in the Obama administration. Though Holbrooke is believed to have seen the war in Afghanistan as winnable, he allegedly struggled in his dealings with the Afghan government - particularly when it came to the country's widespread corruption and lack of functional public services.

In a statement, President Obama called Holbrooke, who was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize seven times (including for his work brokering the war-ending Dayton peace accords in former Yugoslavia), a "true giant of American foreign policy who has made America stronger, safer, and more respected." The president also praised Holbrooke's work in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Richard Holbrooke, Famed U.S. Diplomat, Dies
Richard Holbrooke: A Giant of US Foreign Policy
CBSNews.com Special Report: Afghanistan

"The progress that we have made in Afghanistan and Pakistan is due in no small measure to Richard's relentless focus on America's national interest, and pursuit of peace and security," Mr. Obama's statement read. "He understood, in his life and his work, that our interests encompassed the values that we hold so dear."

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also lauded his work for the administration, and emphasized that while he was a "fierce negotiator," she considered him "a fiercer friend and a beloved mentor."

"When I came to the State Department, I was delighted to be able to bring Richard in and give him one of the most difficult challenges that any diplomat can face," Clinton said on Monday in remarks at a holiday reception for the chiefs of diplomatic missions to the United States. "He immediately put together an absolutely world class staff. It represents what we believe should be the organizational model for the future - people not only from throughout our own government, but even representatives from other governments all working together."

"Tonight America has lost one of its fiercest champions and most dedicated public servants," Clinton added in a separate statement.

As special envoy for Pakistan and Afghanistan, Holbrooke advised the White House on strategies for brokering peace as well as how to revamp civilian assistance efforts there through diplomatic negotiations, development, and reconstruction initiatives.

Though Holbrooke and Afghan President Hamid Karzai were known to have a contentious relationship, the Post reports that Karzai released a statement saying Holbrooke "served greatly the government and the people of the United States."

Senator John Kerry, a Vietnam veteran, also offered his condolences on Monday, calling the end of his career "almost a bittersweet bookend that a career of public diplomacy that began trying to save a war gone wrong, now ends with a valiant effort to keep another war from going wrong."

"Our public careers were intertwined in so many ways, from Vietnam to my presidential campaign to the conflict in Afghanistan, and every step of the way he provided wise advice and intelligent guidance to presidents and statespeople alike," Kerry said, in a Monday night statement. "He died giving everything he had to one last difficult mission for the country he loved," Kerry said.

The White House plans to release a strategic review of the war in Afghanistan this month, and it is not expected to call for a change in strategy. Though Mr. Obama set July 2011 as the date to begin brining troops home when he announced a troop "surge" one year ago, the administration is now pointing to 2014 as its target date for a significant drawdown of U.S. forces.

Watch the CBS' "Early Show" coverage of Holbrooke's death below.




Lucy Madison
Lucy Madison is a political reporter for CBSNews.com. You can read more of her posts here. Follow Hotsheet on Facebook and Twitter.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
51 Comments Add a Comment
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lastwords2012 says:
The last words of a person, especially of a person who is aware of their imminent death can resonate deeply with the people who are left behind. It doesn't matter if they're a politician, writer, actor, etc. The things they say to those near them-whatever you say before leaving forever is what everyone remembers the most. I believe the most interesting question is, what would one say if they knew they were dying?

Here's an interesting 60 second activity that might force everyone to think about their own last words one day, and how it shows what's most important to them. A few of my friends tried the activity and ended up being way more emotional than they thought they'd be-trying to think of what kinds of hypothetical last words they'd say if they knew they were going to "die" in 60 seconds.

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Last-Words/173844572718100
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refdeskpress says:
It is too common for people to look for greater meaning in people's last words. Great meaning is rarely the case. Usually only if someone knows it will be their last words are their comments with significant forethought. While some last words are ironic, thoughful, funny, or even sad -- in the final context -- many are just insignificant, spur-of-the-moment or just bad timing. And many are misconstrued, misheard or misreported by witnesses which should lessen the intention thought to be put into them- William B. Brahms, author Last Words of Notable People -- Final Words of More than 3500 Noteworthy People Throughout History (a reference work on last word context and veracity) www.referencedeskpress.com
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CWOODS8178 says:
PUT MORE TROOPS IN CHICAGO AND DETROIT WHERE MORE PEOPLE ARE KILLED THAN IN THE WARS
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habu99-2009 says:
"CBS" seems to equal "Corporatist Broadcasting Slant". Holbrooke's last words are a fact that doesn't seem to be in dispute. But immediately the corporate- and war-friendly media try to spin away that fact with conjecture it was "painful banter", conjecture by somebody not present in the room when the words were spoken.

Maybe it was painful banter, or maybe the clear and present thoughts in this long-term diplomat's mind were for ending a military conflict that we have been in longer than the Soviets, that we continue to spend money we don't have in waging, that doesn't make us safer but only serves to recruit more people to the Taliban and terrorism. Nah, it couldn't have been that. He was not in his right mind, you know, for wanting to end a war or anything. Go back to watching TV and buying more and more consumer goods on credit. We have everything under control. Nothing to see here.
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Hobotron2084 says:
Where is the fact checking in this story?
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YrWrongAgain says:
Stand in front of the Buddahs of Bamiyan and wait for Taliban justice.
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sensiblysane says:
To believe in ending the war so much, to work for it tirelessly, to have it be the last thought before you face death; this is devotion to peace.
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on_alert247 says:
To bad Obama got the peace prize for doing nothing while Holbrooke got the Bosnian war to end. Shows you what a bunch of ass*s the peace committee is.
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prometheus77 says:
I'm just wondering what kind of sick piece of $hit people would actually feel compelled to not treat with sincerity the last words of a man entering surgery, and clearly and rightfully as it turns out, having major anxiety about the operation.

You're actually attempting to twist his sentiments -- these were the words of a man fearing his own mortality -- into anything but his sincere desire to see an end to the decade long occupations resulting from invasions into Afghanistan and now Pakistan?

If there's ever been a time to actually qualify the President of the United States as a filthy piece of human garbage -- it has to be when the political defense of killing over-rides the true sentiment of a dying bureaucrat who has played such a large role in that killing. Truly a FILTHY PIECE OF HUMAN GARBAGE. Certainly in the eyes of God.
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Birdman04 says:
Heck while we are chasing them in some god forbidden land they are right here in our back yard able to strike us at will from with in. Makes no sense why we do not use our troops to protect our own soil, right here, right now.
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