Rumsfeld Meets With Iraqi Leaders
Also Visits With U.S. Troops On Another Visit To Iraq
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Play CBS Video Video Rumsfeld Back In Iraq Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is in Iraq again with clear instructions for Iraq's newly chosen leaders and a message for U.S. troops stationed there. Correspondent Stacy Case reports.
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Video Rumsfeld Goes To Iraq - Again Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld made a surprise visit to Iraq, to encourage the country's new government and U.S. troops. CBS News' Lee Cowan reports.
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Video Iraq Homecoming? Iraq's path to Democracy is going well enough that U.S. commanders are beginning to predict that some troops will be able to head home by early next year. Lee Cowan has the story.
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Iraqi National Guard soldiers patrol the Haifa Street district in Baghdad. (AP)
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Rumsfeld looks at a chart showing techniques used by the U.S. Army for defeating improvised explosive devices and mines during a demonstration in Baghdad. (AP)
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Defense Secretary Donald H Rumsfeld meets with newly elected Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al Jaafari in Baghdad. (AP)
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Interactive Held Hostage Details on foreign workers and soldiers captured by insurgents in Iraq.
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Interactive Battle For Iraq The government, the insurgency, key players, background and photos.
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Interactive Attacks Map Details on the insurgency and terrorism that has continued to take lives since the fall of Saddam.
In a joint appearance before reporters after their meeting, Rumsfeld and Talabani struggled to make themselves understood to a mixed Iraqi-American press corps. At one point Talabani translated for Rumsfeld as the defense secretary fielded a question from an Iraqi speaking in Arabic. After hearing Talabani's version of the question, Rumsfeld accused the reporter of phrasing it inaccurately, and the garbled exchange ended abruptly as another Iraqi posed another question.
Speaking in English, Talabani said he had assured Rumsfeld that Iraq's interim leaders will work together.
"We are planning to have the (permanent) government as soon as possible, but you know this is the beginning of democratization in Iraq," Talabani said, adding that he expects the government to complete its selection of cabinet ministers before the end of this week. The next major goal is to have a new constitution written by August and ratified by a national vote in October.
Rumsfeld also held a closed meeting with Gen. George Casey and Lt. Gen. John Vines, the top two American commanders in Iraq. In a brief interview with reporters later, Casey said he was encouraged that the long and difficult process of training and equipping Iraqi security forces was gaining ground.
"We're getting better and more efficient at it," he said.
The Iraqis, in turn, have gained a new measure of confidence since the Jan. 30 elections.
"Iraqi security forces are operating more aggressively" against the insurgents, Casey said.
Thus a surge in attacks in early April is being matched by military successes, such as a string of nearly flawless weekend raids, CBS News Correspondent Lee Cowan reports. Overall the raids captured about 65 suspected insurgents.
But what makes the raids significant is the arrests were made by U.S.-trained Iraqi soldiers, not Americans themselves. This could be one of the reasons U.S. officials have indicated some of the U.S. force in Iraq could be coming home by early next year.
Rumsfeld also gave a pep talk to a few hundred soldiers at Camp Liberty, headquarters of the 3rd Infantry Division. He also pinned Bronze Star medals and Purple Heart awards on several soldiers and participated in a mass re-enlistment ceremony for about 100 soldiers gathered in a mess hall.
"The role you're playing is a critically important role in the global war on terrorism," he told them.
Rumsfeld arrived in the Iraqi capital before sunrise aboard an Air Force C-17 cargo plane for his second visit in three months. It was his ninth visit since the war began in March 2003.
©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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