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  • NATO Partners Agree to Train Iraqi Troops

    NATO Partners Agree to Train Iraqi Troops

    washingtonpost.com
    Jun 28, 2004

    Mike Allen


    ISTANBUL, June 27 -- NATO countries will set aside their objections
    and agree Monday to provide emergency military training for the
    interim government of Iraq, White House officials said Sunday.

    Two weeks ago, President Jacques Chirac of France warned against "any
    meddling by NATO in this region." But responding to a request from
    Ayad Allawi, the prime minister of the interim Iraqi government that
    will assume political authority Wednesday, negotiators for the 26 NATO
    countries have agreed to give the alliance a direct role in providing
    military training and said they would call on members to increase
    their support for the new government.

    Details of the agreement, including who will be trained, where and
    when, still must be worked out by the governments, officials said. But
    the White House described the move as giving President Bush the
    international imprimatur he had long sought for post-invasion
    operations.

    Bush and the other leaders of NATO countries are scheduled to finalize
    the tentative training agreement Monday at the start of a two-day
    summit in the largest city in Turkey, which borders Iraq. Faced with a
    wave of bombings and more than 40,000 anti-Bush demonstrators, Turkish
    officials deployed warships outside waterfront hotels and 23,000
    police and soldiers to protect the 3,000 government officials and more
    than 20,000 journalists attending the summit.

    The White House views the agreement on training for Iraq, which
    follows NATO's decision to take over an international security force
    in Afghanistan, as a crucial step in its effort to guide the alliance
    away from its historic emphasis on the defense of its own territory
    and instead toward taking the offensive against terrorism around the
    world.

    Bush, appearing with NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer,
    said the United States was "hoping to change the mission of NATO so it
    meets the threats of the 21st century, and we're going to work
    together to help make sure NATO is configured militarily to meet the
    threats of the 21st century, as well."

    Bush plans to use the centerpiece address of his five-day overseas
    trip to hold up the secular democracy in Turkey, NATO's only
    majority-Muslim member, as a model for Iraq and the greater Middle
    East. Bush tried to make the same point by holding a meeting today
    with Turkish religious leaders that included a rabbi, an Islamic
    cleric and an Armenian Orthodox patriarch.

    Before Allawi sent the letter, the White House received private
    assurances from NATO members that his request would be granted,
    according to aides traveling with Bush. The administration has had to
    dramatically lower its sights, however. Earlier this month, Bush
    sought foreign troops, NATO involvement and debt relief for Iraq at a
    meeting of the Group of Eight leading industrialized nations in Sea
    Island, Ga., but was rebuffed at various times by France, Germany and
    Turkey.

    Diplomats said that to win the endorsement of Germany and France, the
    agreement allows for the possibility that some of the training will
    take place outside Iraq. At the insistence of the Bush administration,
    the operation will be a formal NATO mission rather than a project of
    individual countries.

    James Appathurai, the NATO spokesman, said in a telephone interview
    that alliance ambassadors reached the initial agreement "without any
    sort of dramatic debate" because they "share a common view that we
    should assist Iraq as much and as quickly as possible so that it can
    provide for its own security and so that coalition forces will not be
    required."

    Bush's national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, said from the
    Turkish capital Ankara on "Fox News Sunday" that "NATO will urge that
    this all happen on a very urgent basis, that this isn't a long
    planning exercise, that really they're in a phase of looking to quick
    implementation of these plans."

    Bush said Saturday during a news conference in Ireland that a
    functioning Iraqi police force and military was his most important
    criterion for determining that the U.S. mission in Iraq was complete,
    and he suggested that robust NATO support would mean U.S. troops could
    come home sooner.

    Bush, who had to change his deployment plans before the war when the
    Turkish parliament voted against allowing the use of its bases for a
    northern front, appeared Sunday with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan and said he appreciated "so very much the example your country
    has set on how to be a Muslim country and, at the same time, a country
    which embraces democracy and rule of law and freedom."

    Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, also in Istanbul, met Sunday
    with the foreign and defense ministers of Iraq's interim government.

    Bush shook his head and replied "no" when asked whether the capture of
    three Turkish hostages by militants in Iraq had cast a pall over the
    summit. Bush did not speak at length about the hostage-taking, because
    of what aides called a desire to avoid encouraging the kidnappers. But
    a senior administration official who briefed reporters said Bush
    expressed sympathy to Turkish officials and "made clear that this
    episode demonstrates the kind of an enemy we are fighting, a
    totalitarian enemy which terrorizes and seeks to export chaos to the
    world, as well as chaos in Iraq."

    Rumsfeld compared the recent attacks in Iraq to the Tet offensive of
    1968, a turning point in American public opinion about the Vietnam
    War, when the Vietnamese communists seized cities throughout South
    Vietnam. He told ABC that the insurgents had clearly studied "the idea
    that if you go out and kill a lot of innocent people, even though
    militarily you achieve nothing, the psychological effect through the
    television, through newspapers is that they're there, that they're
    noisy, that they're achieving something big -- which is what the
    effect of Tet was."

    Washington Post Staff Writer
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