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Bush agrees to speedy turnover in
Iraq
By DEB RIECHMANN
Amman, Jordan
- President Bush said Thursday the United States will speed a
turnover of security responsibility to Iraqi forces but assured
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki that Washington is not looking for a
"graceful exit" from a war well into its fourth violent year.
Under intensifying political
pressure at home, the American and Iraqi leaders came together for a
hastily arranged summit to explore how to stop escalating violence
that is tearing Iraq apart and eroding support for Bush's war
strategy.
With Bush hoping to strengthen his
Iraqi counterpart's fragile government, the tensions that flared
when their opening session was abruptly cancelled Wednesday evening
were not apparent when they appeared before reporters after
breakfast Thursday.
" I appreciate the courage you show
during these difficult times as you lead your country," Bush told
al-Maliki after nearly two and a half hours of talks. "He's the
right guy for Iraq." It was their third face-to-face meeting since
al-Maliki took power about six months ago.
"There is no problem," declared al-Maliki.
There were no immediate answers for
mending the Shiite-Sunni divide that is fueling sectarian bloodshed
in Iraq or taming the stubborn insurgency against the U.S. presence.
The leaders emerged from their breakfast and formal session with few
specific ideas, particularly on Bush's repeated pledge to move more
quickly to transfer authority for Iraq's security to al-Maliki's
government.
"One of his frustrations with me is
that he believes that we've been slow about giving him the tools
necessary to protect the Iraqi people," Bush said. "He doesn't have
the capacity to respond. So we want to accelerate that capacity."
There was no explanation from
either side of how that would happen, beyond support for the
long-standing goals of speeding the U.S. military's effort to train
Iraqi security forces and to give more military authority over Iraq
to al-Maliki.
A senior al-Maliki aide who
attended Thursday's talks said the Iraqi leader presented Bush a
blueprint for the equipping and training of Iraqi security forces.
The aide, who spoke anonymously because of the sensitive nature of
the information, declined to give details.
The November elections that handed
control of Congress to Democrats have given rise to heightened calls
for the about 140,000 American soldiers in Iraq to begin coming
home.
Bush acknowledged that pressure and
said he wanted to start troop withdrawals as soon as possible.
Still, he insisted the U.S. will stay "until the job is complete."
"I know there's a lot of
speculation that these reports in Washington mean there's going to
be some kind of graceful exit out of Iraq," he said. "This business
about a graceful exit just simply has no realism to it at all."
The president added: "I'm a realist
because I understand how tough it is inside of Iraq."
Thursday's meetings were supposed
to be Bush's second set of strategy sessions in the Jordanian
capital. But the first meeting between Bush and al-Maliki, scheduled
for Wednesday night along with Jordan's king, was scrubbed.
Accounts varied as to why, but it
followed the leak of a classified White House memo critical of al-Maliki
and a boycott of the Iraqi leader's government in Baghdad. Thirty
Iraqi lawmakers and five cabinet ministers loyal to anti-American
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said they were suspending participation in
Parliament and the government to protest al-Maliki's decision to
meet with Bush.
Bush said al-Maliki "discussed with
me his political situation," but he declined to step publicly into
delicate internal Iraqi matters.
Privately, Bush and Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice repeatedly pressed the Iraqi prime minister
to disband a heavily armed Shiite militia loyal to al-Sadr and
blamed for much of the country's sectarian violence, according to
the senior al-Maliki aide.
The official quoted al-Maliki as
telling Bush that controlling the group "is not a big problem and we
will find a solution for it." Al-Sadr is a key al-Maliki political
backer and the prime minister has regularly sidestepped U.S. demands
to deal with the Mahdi Army.
Before the cameras, Al-Maliki sent
the protesting forces at home a message.
"Those who participate in this
government need to bear responsibilities, and foremost upon those
responsibilities is the protection of this government, the
protection of the constitution, the protection of the law, not
breaking the law," he said.
But al-Maliki's insistence on not
attending the three-way meeting with Bush and Jordan's king was a
troubling sign of possible U.S. difficulties ahead in the effort to
calm Iraq.
The Bush administration is believed
to be pushing its Sunni allies in the region — meeting host Jordan
as well as Saudi Arabia — to persuade Sunni insurgent sympathizers
in Iraq to reconcile with the Shiite factions that are close to the
Iraqi leader.
Al-Maliki's refusal to meet with
Bush while Jordan's king was in attendance showed a level of
mistrust toward his Sunni-dominated neighbors that could bode ill
for the U.S. strategy.
Bush, meanwhile, continued to
reject drawing Shiite-led Iran into helping Iraq in its struggle for
peace.
"I appreciate the prime minister's
views that the Iraqis are plenty capable of running their own
business and they don't need foreign interference from neighbors
that will be destabilizing the country," he said.
Al-Maliki, though, seemed open to
the possibility of Tehran, as well as Damascus, getting involved.
A bipartisan commission on Iraq
that will unveil recommendations next week is expected to urge
direct diplomacy with Iran and Syria, America's chief rivals in the
Middle East.
"We are ready to cooperate with
everybody who believe that they need to communicate with the
national unity government, especially our neighbors," al-Maliki
said. "Our doors are open."
The two agreed that Iraq should not
be partitioned along sectarian lines into semi-regions for the
Kurds, Sunnis and Shiites, Bush said.
"The prime minister made clear that
splitting his country into parts, as some have suggested, is not
what the Iraqi people want, and that any partition of Iraq would
only lead to an increase in sectarian violence," the president said.
"I agree." -- The
Associated Press
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