Bush says Iraq war will require more sacrifice
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – As the U.S. military death toll in
Iraq reached 2,000, President George W. Bush said on Tuesday
that the war will require more time and sacrifice and rejected
calls for a U.S. pullout.
“Each loss of life is heartbreaking, and the best way to
honor the sacrifice of our fallen troops is to complete the
mission and lay the foundation of peace by spreading freedom,”
Bush said, his voice breaking with emotion as he spoke at a
luncheon of military wives at Bolling Air Force Base in
Washington.
His remarks came shortly before the Pentagon announced that
Staff Sgt. George Alexander Jr., 34, of Killeen, Texas, died at
Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas on Saturday of injuries
sustained October 17 in Samarra, Iraq, when a bomb planted by
insurgents detonated near his Bradley Fighting Vehicle.
“This war will require more sacrifice, more time and more
resolve,” Bush said.. “The terrorists are as brutal an enemy as
we have ever faced.”
Although the Pentagon’s official death count since the
March 2003 U.S.-led invasion remained at 1,993, U.S. military
deaths announced in recent days pushed that total to 2,000.
More than 15,000 U.S. troops also have been wounded in combat.
Sensitive to the 2,000 milestone amid waning public support
for the war, the Pentagon said each soldier killed in Iraq died
for a “noble and historic cause.”
“Iraqis and Americans share a common bond and a common
purpose. It is a cause worth fighting for,” said Pentagon
spokesman Bryan Whitman.
Falling support for the war has been one factor pushing
down Bush’s popularity in public opinion polls, and critics
have called on the administration to bring troops home.
Vermont Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy, in a withering
Senate floor speech, voiced impatience with Bush’s
stay-the-course message, and accused the Bush administration of
ignoring the lessons of Vietnam and invading Iraq without
evidence to support the use of force.
He said if U.S. officials are correct that a civil war in
Iraq could be the result if the United States pulled out
prematurely, “My question to them is, when and how then do we
extract ourselves from this mess?”
About 2,800 Iraqi government security troops have died in
action in the war, said a U.S. defense official who asked not
to be named. In addition, about 200 British and other allied
troops have died, the official said.
According to the Pentagon, about one in five U.S. military
deaths in the war have resulted from “nonhostile”
circumstances, ranging from medical problems to automobile
accidents and suicides, with the rest killed in action.
BUSH POINTS TO IRAQI ELECTIONS, SEPT 11
Bush argued Iraq is making progress by approving a new
constitution that clears the way for elections in December and
that Iraqi troops are increasingly playing a larger role in
fighting the insurgency.
“By any standard or precedent of history, Iraq has made
incredible political progress, from tyranny to liberation to
national elections to the ratification of a constitution in the
space of 2-1/2 years,” he said.
In the Senate, Leahy said once a new Iraqi government is in
place, he believed Bush should consult with Congress on “a
flexible plan that includes pulling our troops back from the
densely populated areas where they are suffering the worst
casualties and to bring them home.”
Bush said those calling for a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq
were refuted by a simple question, whether America and other
nations would be more or less safe if Iraqi insurgency leader
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden were
in control of Iraq.
As he has in recent speeches, Bush linked the Iraqi
insurgency with those behind the September 11, 2001, attacks,
since al Qaeda followers have spilled into Iraq to fight
against the Americans.
He argued that Islamic radicals were intent on overturning
Iraq’s fledging democracy and using the country as a
springboard to try to toss out moderate Arab governments,
launch attacks on U.S. targets and create an empire from Spain
to Indonesia.
(Additional reporting by Steve Holland, Charles Aldinger,
Caren Bohan, Tabassum Zakaria and Vicki Allen)
