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Rumsfeld has no intention to resign after
Iraq failures
MANAGUA—Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, facing renewed criticism
about his handling of the Iraq war, has a simple yet emphatic answer for
his critics: "No, no, no."
Speaking as he arrived Sunday in Nicaragua, well away from the discord
in Washington, Rumsfeld said President Bush gave him his personal vote
of confidence in a recent private call.
Rumsfeld also told reporters he was not surprised by reports the White
House chief of staff encouraged Bush to fire him after the 2004
elections.
"It's the task of the chief of staff of the White House — and having
been one, I know that — to raise all kinds of questions with the
president and think through different ways of approaching things,"
Rumsfeld said. "So it wouldn't surprise me a bit if that subject had
come up."
In his new book "State of Denial," Washington Post assistant managing
editor Bob Woodward writes that former White House chief of staff Andrew
Card twice sought to persuade Bush to fire Rumsfeld. Card has not
disputed that he talked about a Rumsfeld resignation with the president
but said it was his job to discuss a wide range of possible
replacements.
The defense secretary and Bush have faced growing criticism for their
handling of the Iraq war as violence there has escalated, U.S.
casualties have mounted and public support for the conflict has
declined.
Rumsfeld is in Managua for two days of meetings with defense officials
from more than 30 South and Central American countries. He was more
eager to talk about the importance of continuing military relationships
with those countries, including military training programs.
Severing ties to the Latin American countries because of disagreements
on other issues, he said, would only hurt the United States in years to
come. It is better to maintain relationships and create a greater
understanding of the U.S., he said.
"There's going to be no nation that will agree with us all the time,"
said Rumsfeld, adding that it would be "unfortunate if our immediate
reaction to some disagreement or difference would have the automatic
effect of severing military to military relationships."
The talks here — in one of the Western Hemisphere's poorest countries —
are expected to focus on counter-narcotics and counterterrorism efforts,
peacekeeping missions, humanitarian and disaster relief and the removal
of land mines.
The meeting of the region's defense ministers follows a tense period in
which Venezuela's leaders lashed out at the U.S. and Bush during a U.N.
meeting in New York City. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez called Bush
"the devil" and slammed U.S. leaders for trying to block his country
from taking a seat on the U.N. Security Council.
Rumsfeld said Sunday he did not expect to meet privately with the
Venezuelan defense minister, although he will see him during the regular
meetings.
One senior defense official traveling with Rumsfeld added that U.S.
officials are not here looking for a conflict with the Venezuelans and
"we're not trying to make this some kind of competition."
U.S. officials have long considered Chavez a destabilizing force. And
they have suggested that Venezuela would make the Security Council
unworkable if the nation were to win its bid against U.S.-backed
Guatemala for a rotating council seat.
Also Sunday, Rumsfeld visited the nearby Masaya Volcano, and made the
steep climb up to the top of the crater, to peer down over the edge of
the most active volcano in the region.
Masaya has erupted at least 19 times since 1524, but on Sunday it was
quiet, with just a cloud of steam rising from its depths.—Online
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