. Earth Science News .
Outgoing US Military Chief Warns Defeat In Iraq Would Invite Another 9/11

Comparing the current war to the Vietnam War, Myers said "the stakes are much higher today."

Washington (AFP) Sep 27, 2005
General Richard Myers warned Tuesday that a US defeat in Iraq would invite another September 11 attack and called for national resolve as he prepared to step down as chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff after four tumultuous years.

At his last press conference as the top US military officer, Myers said extremists were using terrorism to try to break US will and drive American forces from Iraq.

"As a nation, our best weapons are patience and resolve or, in one word, our 'will'," he said. "We simply cannot afford to lose the will to finish the job at hand."

Myers, who steps down Friday as chairman, spoke following a weekend of anti-war protests in Washington and polls showing growing public disenchantment with a war that has claimed the lives of more than 1,900 US servicemembers.

"I think we will be victorious and we'll help with victory in Iraq, but Iraq's going to be perhaps a longer-term issue," he acknowledged.

"It's an insurgency that has to be dealt with probably over a longer period of time in which the political and economic instruments of power are going to play a major, major role," he said.

He warned against withdrawing US forces before the Iraqi government and security forces are capable of handling the insurgency.

If US forces were withdrawn prematurely and al-Qaeda dominated Iraq, he said, "then in my view we would have lost, and the next 9/11 would be right around the corner, absolutely."

A victory in Iraq "would be huge for al-Qaeda and their interests," he said. Al-Qaeda carried out the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.

Calls for a withdrawal of all US forces from Iraq were prominent in the protests over the weekend, which police said drew more than 100,000 people.

Comparing the current war to the Vietnam War, Myers said "the stakes are much higher today."

"If we are not successful in the long war on terrorism, then our way of life is, indeed, at stake. I mean, it's just that simple," he said.

US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld praised Myers as a "wise and valued counselor."

"When the history of this time is written, an era of tragedy and turmoil and triumph, I believe it will be said of Dick Myers that he was one of the most consequential chairman of the joint chiefs in our history," Rumsfeld said.

"No chairman has been more deeply involved in more critical decisions involving our country and our security and certainly involving the men and women in uniform," he said.

Myers' four year tenure as President George W. Bush's top military adviser has spanned two wars -- in Afghanistan and Iraq -- and a bloody insurgency whose ferocity and tenacity took the US military by surprise.

He leaves a military that also is mired in controversy over abuses of prisoners and the indefinite detentions of hundreds of war-on-terror captives without Geneva Convention protections.

Meanwhile, three top leaders of al-Qaeda -- Osama bin Laden, his number two Ayman al-Zawahiri, and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq -- have eluded capture.

But Myers said 600 al-Qaeda leaders have been captured or killed, all the September 11 plotters but bin Laden and Zawahiri have been "wrapped up," and the al-Qaeda leadership in Saudi Arabia has been "virtually wiped out."

"So I don't think they would take much heart out of the fact that there are three at the top that are still remaining," he said.

As chairman, Myers has been a key link between US civilian and military leaders.

How influential he has been or what might change with his departure remains unclear, however. As Rumsfeld's self-effacing sidekick at Pentagon news conferences, he has rarely hinted at disagreements with his boss.

Some critics have faulted him for not showing greater independence, but aides say his style has been to argue his differences in private.

He was vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs when hijackers flew airliners into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, killing more than 3,000 people.

Less than a month later, he was in the top slot as US-led forces retaliated, toppling Afghanistan's Taliban regime with a swift and innovative campaign that combined US air power with Afghan insurgents on the ground.

Within two years, US-led forces had invaded Iraq on what turned out to be unfounded suspicions it had weapons of mass destruction.

Myers will be replaced on October 1 as chairman by Marine General Peter Pace, currently the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express

Blair: 'No doubt' Over U.S. War On Terror
Brighton, England (UPI) Sep 27, 2005
Prime Minister Tony Blair said Tuesday he remained convinced Britain's place was alongside the United States in fighting the war on terror, in an address that fractured Labor Party opinion.







  • How To Halt A Hurricane: First Spill Oil, Then Seed Clouds
  • Bush Visits Storm Zone As Congress Asks What Went Wrong
  • Former US Emergency Chief Defends Hurricane Response
  • Outside View: Prepare For Disaster

  • Carbon Storage Could Take In More Than A Third Of World Pollution By 2050
  • Land Surface Change on Alaska Tundra Creating Longer, Warmer Summers in Arctic
  • Lands Surface Change On Alaska Tundra Creating Longer, Warmer Summers In Arctic
  • Impact Of Global Warming On Weather Patterns Underestimated

  • Envisat And ERS-2 Reveal Hidden Side Of Hurricane Rita
  • MERIS Monitoring Tracks Planetary Photosynthesis Levels
  • NASA Technology Monitors Wildlife Habitats From The Air
  • Orbimage Announces Awards Totaling $6.1M Of ClearView Orders From The NGA

  • Investment In Energy R&D Declines Despite Soaring Prices, Supply Problems
  • Monster Storms Lay Bare US Refinery Crisis
  • Oil Prices Calm As Hurricane Rita Mostly Spares US Gulf Production
  • Ambient Receives First DOD Contract for Its Battery-Free Technology

  • U.N. Says $100M Needed To Stop Bird Flu
  • Poor Sanitation, Housing, Fast Travel Explain Rise Of Dengue Fever
  • Health Wrap: Fading Flu Fighters
  • U.N. Concerned About Bird Flu In Indonesia

  • China Kicks Off High-Tech Project To Spy On Pandas' Sex Lives
  • Millions Of Animals Face Death Sentence In Australia
  • Japan Releases Endangered Storks Into The Wild
  • US Launches Campaign Against Asia Wildlife Trade Amid Bird Flu Threat

  • Toxic Flood Lifts Lid On Common Urban Pollution Problem
  • Metals Giant Rusal Faces Uzbek Anger Over Expansion Plan In Tajikistan
  • New Orleans Suburb Covered In Slime Faces Uncertain Future
  • Canada To Press Chinese President Over Pollution

  • Scientists Uncover Why Picture Perception Works
  • The Roots Of Civilization Trace Back To ... Roots
  • The Mechanics Of Foot Travel
  • Compound May Prevent Neuron-Degeneration

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement