DoD News Briefing - Rumsfeld and Gen. Myers
NEWS TRANSCRIPT from the United States Department of Defense
DoD News Briefing Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld Thursday, February 21, 2002 - 12:03 p.m. EST
(Also participating was Gen. Richard Myers, chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff.)
Rumsfeld: Good afternoon. First, on behalf of the people of the United States and the Department of Defense, I want to
express our condolences to the family of Sergeant Andrew Russell of the Australian Special Air Services, who was killed
in Afghanistan on February 16th in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. The sergeant was one of a number of Australian
forces that are in Afghanistan and in the region performing important missions in the fight against terrorism.
Casualties in this conflict have been low, but each individual, of course, is a part of a family, part of a community,
and part of a military force that deeply feels the loss. The United States recognizes that and is grateful to those
countries and their service men and women who are working with us in dealing with the problems of terrorism.
Australia, of course, is our friend and ally for many, many decades. They've actively supported the war against terror
by providing forces, tactical and strategic airlift, and a number of naval vessels. Members of both the Australian and
British forces, for that matter, have experienced serious injuries in recent months, and certainly the courage and the
commitment and the contributions of these and other coalition partners are valued greatly by the United States.
I'd also like to comment a bit on these recent reports on information operations. Government officials, the Department
of Defense, this secretary, this general, and the people who work with us tell the American people and the media and,
indeed the world, the truth. If anyone says something that proves not to have been accurate, they have a responsibility
to correct that at an early opportunity, and they do. We've tried and will continue to try to do our best to get the
truth out as soon and as fully as is possible.
The Department of Defense does not now and has no plans to conduct any disinformation campaigns or to promulgate false
or inaccurate or misleading information to domestic or foreign audiences. Any suggestion to the contrary would not be
correct.
The so-called Office of Strategic Influence was created in November of 2001 to assist in fashioning policy regarding the
military aspects of information operations. The charter of the office is under development. Consistent with the Defense
Department policy, under no circumstance will that office or its contractors, for that matter, knowingly or deliberately
disseminate false information to the American or to foreign publics. The office will focus on helping our forces perform
missions that are appropriate.
In the war on terrorism, for example, we dropped millions of food rations to starving people in Afghanistan. They were
in yellow packets, and they were dropped from aircraft. The Taliban and the al Qaeda conducted an organized
disinformation campaign, falsely telling starving Afghan people that the United States was dropping poisoned food. It
was most certainly not poisoned food. So we had an information operation in which we dropped leaflets explaining to the
Afghan people that the food was in fact good and was, as a matter of fact, also culturally appropriate and that they
should not be concerned about the misleading information they were receiving.
Other projects have included activities such as the so-called Commando Solo aircraft, which broadcasts radio messages to
the people in Afghanistan -- messages to encourage enemy forces to surrender; the advertising of rewards for information
that leads to the capture of terrorists, weapons of mass destruction material or other items of interest that merit such
a reward or bounty; announcements regarding the availability and location of humanitarian assistance; and warnings about
dangers of unexploded ordnance or military equipment, and the like.
These are important activities. They're critical to our efforts. And this office is an attempt to better organize these
types of activities.
General Myers has some comments to make as well.
Myers: Thank you, Mr. Secretary, and good afternoon. I just returned this morning from Afghanistan. Previous to that I
was in India and Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.
At each of these stops, I met with my counterparts and other senior government leaders, and we discussed, as you might
imagine, a wide range of bilateral-related issues, military-to-military ties, and most importantly this global war on
terrorism. I spent some time thanking them for their cooperation in this war on terrorism.
However, the main purpose of the trip was to visit our troops in the field. The soldiers, airmen, sailors, Marines that
I met were doing a great job. They're extremely dedicated, motivated, and realize that the task at hand will not be over
any time soon. I'd like to tell the American public that they can rest assured that their sons and daughters, their
brothers and sisters and their wives and husbands are doing a superb job for this country.
And just one last note. When I left for the region last week, we took some Valentines written by elementary-school-aged
children with us. This was from around the United States of America. We took a small portion of what were shipped and
helped -- brought to the region by the USO. It was a wonderful gesture and brought a little bit of home to those serving
so far away. So I'd just like to thank all those elementary school students, their teachers and their parents for
putting so much thought behind these Valentines that, everywhere I went -- some had already gotten there before us, some
we delivered -- I can just report to you that the troops loved them.
With that --
Q: (Off mike.)
Myers: Sir, this is Valentines. This is -- that was Christmas. This is a -- this is Valentines.
With that, take questions.
Rumsfeld: Charlie?
Q: Mr. Secretary, is the investigation complete into the January 24th raid at Hazar Qadam. Have you determined whether
or not you killed and arrested people that you didn't intend to kill and arrest?
Rumsfeld: I can't say whether the investigation is -- correction -- let me rephrase it, even. What we try to do after an
incident that comes to our attention is to ask ourselves what kinds of lessons might be learned from this. And the word
"investigation" sometimes has the implication of more formality or a disciplinary action, which is not the case in the
overwhelming number of incidents when we have to go out and determine and have a review of what took place, which
happens continuously and quite appropriately because we do need to continuously find out what the lessons are that we
need to benefit from. Therefore, I can't say that CINCCENT has completed everything they're doing. I do have information
that I can provide you, however, today.
I think it was January 23rd -- I could be wrong, but I think that was it -- at a place called Hazar Qadam -- Q-A-D-A-M
-- there were two compounds. They were observed, we are told, over a period of several weeks. The signature and the
intelligence information that was gathered over these several weeks were persuasive and compelling.
They used the word "signature" -- it provided a signature, and a belief on the observers' part that there was al Qaeda
or Taliban activity there. However, it was not strong enough to simply call in an airstrike, which would have been
clearly, the easiest, quickest thing to do. So they did not do that. Instead, they decided to go in and conduct a ground
direct-action activity, which they did do.
And as they proceeded towards these two compounds, my information is that the people in one compound did not fire at
them, and they entered the compound and captured a number of people -- in the high 20s. [The number of Afghans taken
into custody by U.S. forces was 27.] As they approached the second compound -- these are two separate teams, U.S. Army
teams. As they approached the second compound, an individual saw them, went inside the compound, and shortly thereafter,
the people inside the compound began firing at the U.S. Army forces that were moving towards that compound. In the
course of the firefight, some number between 10 and 15, as I recall, of the Afghan people in that second compound were
killed. [The total number of Afghans who were killed during the raid is 16, with 14 killed at one compound and two
killed in the other compound.]
In that compound, and in the other compound, the Special Forces proceeded, and to the extent people did not resist, they
were put in plastic cuffs and held. To the extent people did resist, they were subdued physically and put in plastic
cuffs and held. They then were placed aboard helicopters and moved to some other location. Whether it was Kabul or
Kandahar, I don't recall [they were taken to Kandahar]. And they were then interrogated, and after a period of some
days, the individuals were released.
I think that the way to characterize it is that there -- it is -- it appears to the people who reported to me that in
fact these individuals were not Taliban or al Qaeda, number one. Number two, that the suggestion that anyone was
mistreated while in captivity is not correct. There is very likely a situation where some of the people resisted being
subdued and may have been bruised in that process. But the suggestion that someone was bruised or harmed in some way
after they were in captivity is not the case.
Just to kind of recap what took place there, we have -- we know there are large numbers of al Qaeda and Taliban that are
still loose in the country. We pick up intelligence that they are threatening U.S. forces in various parts of the
country. The individuals involved in this instance used, in my view, their best judgment. They were measured and watched
the situation over a period of time before acting. Instead of acting from the air, they decided it would be appropriate
to act from the ground. They have instructions from me and from their commanders to be leaning forward not back, that we
do have a high interest in finding Taliban and al Qaeda terrorists and supporters of terrorists so that we can gather
intelligence and prevent further attacks and prevent attacks on U.S. forces and coalition forces in the country as well
as attacks on the interim government in the country.
The forces that went in, in the instances where they were not fired upon did not use lethal force. In instances where
they were fired on, they did use lethal force, which is exactly what their rules of engagement provide. My impression is
that they did their jobs, and it is a difficult situation that they're dealing with, and they used good judgment
throughout the process.
Q: Mr. Secretary, just a brief follow, if I may -- if I may. Since these people were not al Qaeda and were not Taliban,
would you say in retrospect that the raid was a mistake? And can we take it from what you've said that no disciplinary
at all will be involved?
Rumsfeld: Let me try to use my words. I do not think it is a mistake for people to observe carefully and made a judgment
about behavior on the ground, and then make a calculation that there is compelling evidence of Taliban or al Qaeda
activity, but not sufficiently compelling to use air power, instead to go in on the ground. I think that is certainly no
mistake.
And once going in on the ground, it seems to me it is no mistake at all, if you're fired on, to fire back. And we expect
people to defend themselves and to take exactly the action that, at least at the moment, I'm aware they took.
Q: And no disciplinary action?
Rumsfeld: Why would there be? I can't imagine why there would be any.
Q: In your review of this, you say you're looking back for the lessons learned. Where, then, is the error in the
persuasive and compelling information that you said?--
Rumsfeld: I don't think it is an error. I think it's just a fact that circumstances on the ground in Afghanistan are
difficult. It's untidy. It is not a neat situation where all the good guys are here and the bad guys are there. It is a
difficult situation. And I think all you can do is exactly what was done, is to be serious about pursuing al Qaeda and
Taliban, to make judgments based on experience and best information as to the kinds of behavior that could suggest the
possibility of al Qaeda or Taliban people, and then to in some instances use air power, in some instances you take
direct action by the ground.
Q: Could you be a little more forthcoming, perhaps, General, telling us what gave these persuasive indications?
Rumsfeld: I'd rather not. Well --
Q: Were these citizens who were acting as though they were -- what --
Rumsfeld: There are a whole series of behavior patterns --
Q: Because there's a lot of people, then, who were innocents here that were killed. What is happening --
Rumsfeld: Well, wait a second. They fired -- let's not call them "innocents." We don't know quite what they were. They
were people who fired on our forces.
Q: Do you know how many or -- one? I mean, 10 or 15 people were killed.
Rumsfeld: No -- that's right. And they were in a compound, and our people approached, and the one compound did not fire
at them, and they were not killed, and the other compound did fire at them, and they were killed. [Fire was encountered
at both compounds. Two were killed in one compound and 14 in the other.]
Myers: And --
Rumsfeld: Yes?
Q: (Off mike.)
Q: Well, I'm asking, though, is there some indication that you had that --
Rumsfeld: Sure. There are a lot of things that the people on the ground look for, that give them indication that there
may be al Qaeda or Taliban people operating in an area. For me to sit here and list all of the different types of things
that they might look at would simply tell the world things that people ought not to do, so that they would not be found.
And it seems to me it would be unuseful from the standpoint of the men and women in the armed services in Afghanistan.
Q: Have you ascertained who these people were?
Rumsfeld: Yes. They were apparently individuals who were associating in one way or another with another with one of the
leaders in that area, called, I believe, Jan Mohamud, if I'm not mistaken. [The Central Command investigation found that
the compounds were likely controlled by friendly Afghan forces under the leadership of Jan Mohamud.]
(Cross talk.)
Q: Mr. Secretary, to follow up on that --
Q: Could I follow up, sir?
Q: Just to follow up on that, the signature, though -- did any of that information for the signature come from non-U.S.
forces -- in other words, perhaps from some local Afghans who may have had -- (inaudible)?
Rumsfeld: No.
Q: So it all came from U.S. forces?
Rumsfeld: That's my understanding.
Q: Okay.
Rumsfeld: I could be wrong, but that's my understanding.
Q: Mr. Secretary, I was in that very village three days after the raids --
Rumsfeld: Were you?
Q: And there seemed to be considerable discrepancies between what you're saying and what the locals reported in very
large numbers, including the fact that it seems that U.S. forces had no interpreters with them; that the people in the
building where 19 people were killed were shouting that "we're friends, we're friends" in Pashtu; that most of them were
found dead in their beds; that there were considerable other discrepancies that don't match with what you're reporting
here.
Is there any intention to go further into this case, especially the fact that the building that was hit, where 19 people
were reportedly killed, was in fact a collection point for weapons that were surrendered by the Taliban to people, we
were told, associated with Mr. Karzai.
Rumsfeld: I've never heard or seen or watched an incident where there were not various reports and discrepancies about
what happened. If you watch a car accident and ask five people standing on the street what took place, they will come up
with different versions of what took place. We know that.
I don't doubt for a minute that what you're saying is what you found. I also don't doubt for a minute but that what I
have just said is what the people who went in to look at the situation found and reported back to me. For example, the
difference between 19 and 14 -- all I know is, I was told 14. [The Central Command investigation determined that a total
of 16 were killed]. That is what these fine young men and women who do this work for the United States armed forces
reported back, that that was their best judgment was that there were 14. Your number is 19. I doubt that either of you
counted bodies, I just -- it's hard to do. They're buried promptly in that country. I don't know how to sort that type
of thing any better than I've done. Yes?
Q: Mr. Secretary, there seems to be a disagreement between your department and the State Department as to how to restore
peace and stability to Afghanistan. The State Department, we're told, wants to beef-up the security force and spread it
out to other cities beyond Kabul. You said yesterday that you would more -- be more willing and would prefer to put your
assets and the assets of this department into training and building up an Afghan army, and yet it will take more than
six months, perhaps, to do that. Will that give you sufficient time to stave off what seems to be an impending civil war
in that part of the world, in Afghanistan again?
Rumsfeld: My goodness, gracious. There's a lot of things in there I'll have to disaggregate and comment on.
You said first, I believe something to the effect that there seems to be a disagreement between my department and the
State Department on this issue. Not to my knowledge. I'm aware that there was a front-page story in a newspaper that
suggested that, but if there is such a disagreement, it has not come to my attention.
The second thing you said, it would take six months, I believe, to do something one way, and the implication being it
would take a different amount of time to do it another way, I don't know that that is the case in either instance.
Third, I believe what I said yesterday -- I don't know what I said, but I know what I think, and -- (laughter) -- I
assume it's what I said. The situation on the ground is as you suggest. It is very difficult. It is dangerous. There is
a need for security. The chairman of the Interim Authority is properly concerned about security in the country. There is
at least one neighbor that's been doing things in the area that have been somewhat unsettling for Afghanistan.
Q: Iran, right?
Rumsfeld: They've clearly been providing some weapons and doing some things in that area that is not helpful, I don't
think. There are still some controversies between various elements among the anti-Taliban forces. There are still
pockets of al Qaeda and Taliban people there. There are criminals. There are drug traffickers. It is not a pretty
picture. It's a difficult situation.
There isn't anyone in the United States government who I know, who I've been in a meeting with or have been reported on
being in any kind of a meeting, from any department, that doesn't recognize that and isn't aware that it's in our
interest as a country to take the kinds of steps that would be appropriate to assist that country in providing a more
stable and secure environment so that humanitarian people can move around, so that displaced persons would return home,
so that refugees would return, so that the economy could begin to flourish again.
As a matter of fact, Dick Myers mentioned this morning when we were visiting that while he was there, he talked to
people in the International Security Assistance Force and they do believe the economy is picking up, and you can see
more activity on the streets and more energy and vitality in the country, which is a good sign.
How might all of that be done? Well, there are a variety of things across a spectrum you could do. One is, the United
States could go in and just police the whole country with lots of troops; say, for the sake of argument, 20(,000),
25(,000), 30,000. Another country could go in to do that. Another way it could be done is one country could go to one
city and do it and another country could go to another city and do it A third way it could be done is the way the
chairman of the Interim Authority would like it done, and that is to assist in creating an Afghan army that wouldn't be
leaving in two, four, eight, 10, 12 months, but would be there and would be multi-regional, and that the investment of
time and money go into providing that kind of assistance.
Another way to do it would be to decide to not put your time and money and effort into that but put it into building up
a more permanent, much larger International Security Assistance Force.
Now which way is the best way? I don't know. Which way is the fastest way? I don't know. Which one would be the most
cost- effective? I don't know. Those are things that are being discussed. I've announced here that we have people in the
region conducting an assessment at the present time. The Fahim Khan, the interim defense minister, is addressing the
subject. Mr. Karzai is addressing the subject. All of us are interested in doing that. The president's special envoy,
Zal Khalilzad, has been interesting himself in that subject. It's been discussed at various levels in the government,
but how it will all come out or what I'll think when we finally hear back from the assessment team, I don't know.
What I expressed yesterday, it seems to me, is logical. And it is this: To the extent we can put our effort and time and
money into creating something that lives there and is going to stay there rather than something that's temporary and is
going to be pulled out at some point with the risk of injecting an instability back into the equation, my view is that
would be preferable. If it turns out it can't be done as rapidly or as effectively or as -- in a way that's
cost-effective, then, clearly, we do something else.
But I think the whole premise of your question probably lacks substance in fact, notwithstanding the report that you
read. Yes.
Q: So, do I get a D, then, on that question?
Rumsfeld: No, the question was fine, because it was right off the front page of the New York Times. (Laughter.) But --
and I'm happy to answer it. If there is such a controversy taking place -- I've been out of town, and so has the
general. I've been talking -- he was talking to our relatively modest number of troops in Afghanistan. I was talking to
our somewhat larger number of troops in Salt Lake City, at the Olympics, and Nellis Air Force Base.
Q: Mr. Secretary, yesterday European Command confirmed that coalition aircraft were threatened patrolling the no-fly
zone in Northern Iraq. And there hasn't been a response yet. Previously, of course, we've struck back when they've been
threatened. My question is not about a response to a threat, but if we -- the U.S. identifies a
weapons-of-mass-destruction facility in Iraq, would we now act alone to take it out?
Rumsfeld: We certainly wouldn't discuss it in a press conference. Yes.
Q: You have mentioned that one of the missions of the U.S. military in Afghanistan, using your words, "is to prevent
attacks on the interim government." Can you explain a little bit further, with more precision, your policy at the moment
about when U.S. military forces will, in fact, step in to prevent attacks on the interim government -- only if you
believe Taliban or al Qaeda are involved?
You had not stepped in some of the warfare going on several weeks' back in Eastern Afghanistan when the interim
government forces were threatened. What is your policy on that right now?
And my other question is, to follow up on Suzanne's -
Rumsfeld: Wait a second. Let's -- let's -- that's a long one.
Q: Okay. As long as I get my follow-up.
Rumsfeld: That's a long one. Our policy has not changed at all. There was some speculation in a news story about the
fact that we were taking sides of some sort. We were not. In fact, the activity -- I've forgotten exactly when that was,
but it was -- I think February 19th there was a story about a change in our policy, the implication being that because
we had used airstrikes, that our policy might have changed because we seemed to be taking sides. [The New York Times
story appeared on Feb. 19; the military actions referred to in the story occurred on Feb. 16 and 17.] We weren't. These
were instances where there were friendly Afghan forces and U.S. Special Forces proceeding on the ground, came to
roadblocks, and came to situations where they were fired upon. They called in airpower.
To go to the narrower point of to what extent one might support or help to defend the interim government, it seems to me
that that's difficult to know. First of all, we have very few forces on the ground. There are a lot of Afghan forces on
the ground. There is an International Security Assistance Force in the town where the interim government resides, and it
is their task to provide that kind of security.
Now, we do have -- have agreed to assist them with some intelligence, we've assisted with some logistics, we've agreed
to be available as a quick reaction force in the event there were some difficulties there. But our hope is that the
Afghan forces that exist and have prevailed over the Taliban will be the ones who will provide security during this
period, and that the International Security Assistance Force would provide it in the Kabul area.
Q: For General Myers. Can you give us some of your thoughts on having coming back from the region recently, is there an
appetite there for a long-term U.S. presence by way of either a base, small amounts of troops, prepositioned equipment?
What's the feeling?
Myers: Tony, I think I'd characterize it this way: the appetite there is for sustained and meaningful
military-to-military engagement. And as you know, in a place like Uzbekistan, where we're getting great support for our
operation down in Qarshi Khanabad, we had a relationship through NATO and Partnership for Peace with Uzbekistan. And
what we're talking about is to continue that relationship and have a bilateral component, U.S.-Uzbekistan, that's
probably more robust in terms of training -- training there, training here, training their people here through IMET
[International Military Education and Training program] and other ways. So that's what we're really talking about.
Now I think we're also talking about having the ability to get access, perhaps, to places there. But in terms of --
there's been no decision made about permanent troops presence in the region or anything like that.
Q: But do you think now, after having come back, that maybe we should have some established bases and pre-positioned
equipment?
Myers: Well, I think, to support what the secretary just described are our objectives in Afghanistan, we're going to
need some logistics hubs, and we've established -- we have a couple of those, one in Kyrgystan -- they've been gracious
to give us some room out at Manas, which is their international airport, serves their capital, and down at Karshi
Khanabad as well. And, you know, we may have a very small reception presence there. I mean, who can say, because we
don't know how long we're going to be in Afghanistan. We don't know what the logistic environments are going to be in
our training efforts, if we go that way, for an Afghan army. I mean, there's a lot of questions out here, but basically
it's just a more habitual and maybe a deeper military-to-military relationship.
Q: Can either of you provide us with some insight into whether or not it has become necessary to fine tune the criteria
for when an airstrike is conducted against a potential target, or when a direct action on the basis of what you have
learn from Hazar Qadam? And then, is there any investigation underway for the situation in Zhawar Kili, where the CIA
attacked and killed apparently three people? Or is that just being left?
Rumsfeld: The first is, it has to be answered this way: that the criteria are being revised all the time as people
learn. And from day one, the more one learns, you gain experience as to how people behave and what seems to make sense
and what doesn't make sense, and what might be a clue for this or a clue for that. And they do that continuously. And
that's still going on.
Q: January 23rd, when --
Rumsfeld: I'm sure that if you --
Q: (inaudible.)
Rumsfeld: I'm sure if you talked to the folks on the ground and asked them the question, are they constantly making
judgments, as they look in different parts of the country where different behavior patterns exist -- I'm sure that
different behavior patterns exist between the Taliban and the al Qaeda -- it is a certainty that that is happening on a
regular basis.
Q: But that's not the question, of course. The question is, as a direct result of what you have learned from the attack
on January 23rd --
Rumsfeld: And I -- it is the answer to the question. The answer is, I am certain that's the case. You would have to ask
CINCCENT, and he would have to go down and ask the people at the tactical level, who are the ones that are involved in
making those kinds of judgments. And you can be certain, I can be certain, without knowing, I can be absolutely certain
that the people involved look at each instance and continue to learn and continue to make revisions in how they approach
things and how they look at things, and they get better and better at it every day.
Q: What about Zawar Kili?
Rumsfeld: I'm not sure that I like the word "investigation" that you used in your question. So I'd go back to my earlier
comment: My understanding is that there have, in fact, been people who have gone up there and have, in fact, gathered,
as I've announced from this podium, various kinds of materials and are examining them. And I do not have a report as to
what they have found in those examinations.
Myers: Jack, I can give you a little bit more on that -- how this learning goes on. When I was in Afghanistan just the
other day -- yesterday, I guess, best I can tell you -- the -- you lose track; I mean, we -- (soft laughter) -- all I
know is we flew for about 20 hours, and here we are.
The intelligence effort inside the country is absolutely superb. It's a multi-agency civil law enforcement -- our civil
law enforcement. It is -- it has contact with people that are out with the Afghans. It is -- it is, of course, a
learning body. I mean, that's what they do. They've learned from the first time they set up to now, it's constantly
changing. As somebody said, it's a bunch of thirty-pound brains in operator bodies, which, in our parlance, means we've
got some really smart people that are not only doing the intelligence part but are also the operators. And they're the
ones that make these judgments and come up with these recommendations. And it's the finest group of Americans -- the
smartest guys and gals that I've ever seen that are there working, so --
Q: General Myers, when you were -- this is just a follow-up on that question. When you were in Afghanistan, did you have
some discussions about these episodes where some of the local folks were killed? And were the Afghans concerned that not
enough due diligence was made on the part of the Americans before these actions were taken?
Myers: No, I had, in our discussions, nothing but support for our actions. And when I was talking to the folks that are
developing intelligence and so forth, it was on the future, not on the past. I was leaving that up to CENTCOM.
Q: Did they have some suggestions for you as to how to differentiate between friend and foe in these --
Myers: No, we didn't get into that.
Rumsfeld: We'll take two more questions: one here and then one way in the back.
Q: Have you personally been given an adequate explanation or seen any photographic evidence to refute these claims that
some of these victims at Hazar Qadam were shot in their beds or dead men were found handcuffed? And second, given what
you know now about the incident there, should the U.S. formally apologize for what happened at Hazar Qadam?
Rumsfeld: The people that went in to review what took place in that situation and who are there have been met with,
talked to, and I have received a report back. And as I said earlier, there's no question but that there are different
versions of what took place. We received no information that would validate the suggestions in your question.
Myers: In fact, Mr. Secretary, it's just the opposite, I think. We know that there were people that presented themselves
that weren't armed and were not shot. Those that were shooting back, we dealt with force. You put those -- the quick
plastic straps on to subdue people, and some of those may have been shot, so while they're waiting for medical care, you
handcuff them, but they certainly weren't shot in their handcuffs. I mean, that's an after- the-fact situation.
Rumsfeld: Which is not to say a report -- a person could go -- could not go in, see something and go away with the
impression you just gave.
Myers: It's possible, maybe somebody died because -- with their cuffs on, thinking -- and they'd say, "Well, they were
shot with them on." But that's not how that would work.
Rumsfeld: And the formal apology, Mr. Secretary? I'm -- my impression is that the CINCCENT people in the region have
talked to Karzai, have talked to Jan Mohammed, and are fully aware that to the extent people were detained who, in
retrospect, need not have been detained, that those kinds of assurances were made. With respect to the people that fired
on the American forces and then were killed, clearly in retrospect that's unfortunate. On the other hand, one cannot
fault the people who fired back in self-defense. At least I can't. I'm sure others feel they can. But I think, from
everything I've been told, the people involved in this operation handled themselves in an appropriate way both during
and after the incident.
Way in the back, and then I'm going to come to you. You look --
Q: Hi. When...Was that me?
Rumsfeld: Yes, indeed. Excuse me.
Q: Mr. Secretary, is the Defense Department prepared to resume the annual military-to-military consultations with China?
Rumsfeld: I think that the way the question is phrased suggests that we're not having relationships. I do think we
currently have some connections. And what happened was, if you'll recall, after the EP-3 incident, we -- I put a stop to
it. It struck me that with American citizens being held prisoner in China, it was not an appropriate time to make port
visits or have courtesy calls. Once they were released, we then have been reviewing things on a case-by- case basis.
And my impression is that at the present time, decisions are being made -- yes, no or maybe -- depending on what it
looks like, and whether or not it would be deemed to be something that would be at least as beneficial to the United
States as it would be to China. And I also am quite certain some port visits are still going on. So I would say that
we're in a -- probably a rhythm that's fairly predictable at the present time.
Q: I was referring specifically to the Defense Consultative Talks, the annual talks that -- of a high level?
Rumsfeld: Oh, sure. Yeah, that -- I think that's at the deputy assistant or the assistant secretary level. My
recollection is that these kinds of things are going to be discussed probably during the trip that the president's going
to be making to China.
On the other hand, with respect to that particular meeting, my recollection is we offered to meet with them, that --
you're talking about the thing that talked about maritime incidents that was --
Q: Not a maritime incident, no. That has gone on. It's the annual -- I think it started in '97 or '98, the Defense
Consultative Talks. They sort of lay out the blueprint for exchanges --
Rumsfeld: Then I just don't have an answer for that particular forum.
Q: Okay. And just more broadly, in terms of --
Rumsfeld: We're really limited on time. Why don't we do one per person.
Q: I find it kind of odd that you say that they were shooting in self-defense, when in fact they were the ones who were
-- the Special Forces were the ones who were attacking in this incident. And also --
Rumsfeld: I'm trying to think what a better word would be. Here you had two Special Forces teams, they moved towards two
separate compounds. In one case the compound did not fire at them and no one was killed, is my recollection, and they
were in fact detained -- (aside) -- was someone killed in that compound as well?
Q: Yeah. In the first compound, which is in fact is not in Hazar Qadam, the town is Oruzgan.
Rumsfeld: Right.
Q: In the first compound, was the District Administration Building, there were two people killed and --
Rumsfeld: Okay, and that's where the detainees were taken?
Q: Yes, sir. And in the second compound, which is in a section of Oruzgan called Hazar Qadam, there was a school and
there were, according to villagers, 19 people killed in that school.
Rumsfeld: Okay. And our report is that it's, I believe, 14 total. [The Central Command investigation determined that 16
people were killed]. But I guess different people would use different words. It seems to me if you were on a Special
Forces team and you were moving towards a compound that you believed contained al Qaeda, after a good deal of attention
over several weeks, and you made a decision not to use air against it, and you wanted to go in on the ground and try to
determine what it was, and you approached, and you began taking fire, that you would, in fact, defend yourself by
shooting at them.
I can see where you would say, well, is that really self-defense if you're in their neighborhood and it's not your
neighborhood. But maybe there's a better way to characterize it. And so --
Q: If you're in that compound and it's at night and you see armed men coming at you, then it would seem to me that it
would be acting in self-defense to fire at them.
Rumsfeld: You could view it that way as well, I suppose. Even though you weren't fired on, someone could say that they
saw someone coming up with a weapon, and even though the weapon wasn't pointed at them and it wasn't being fired at
them, that in their own self-defense, they decided to shoot. Someone could say that. My impression is someone could say
it either way.
Q: Mr. Secretary, did you get any report on how long the exchange of fire lasted, I mean, for 14, 15 people to be
killed? Was there a real gun battle that went on there, or was it --?
Rumsfeld: I have no length of time. Do you happen to -- have you heard any reports on that? (Laughter.) You should come
up here with me! (Laughter.) It's minutes. It doesn't take long.
Q: According to the locals, it began -- this operation itself began very late on the 23rd and it continued until the
24th, to about 3 o'clock in the morning. So, yeah, it continued for some length.
Rumsfeld: We're going -- we'll take this last question. Pam.
Q: Could you explain if there's any special significance to the fact that you pointed out these people were loyal to
Mohammed and --
Rumsfeld: No significance at all. That just stuck in my head. I read a report, and they apparently were part of some --
in some way associated with him.
Q: And were the weapons and munitions that were found then that were later blown up -- were they from Taliban
collections? Was this a government collection -- (inaudible) --
Rumsfeld: I do not know. There --
Q: since you don't know the origination of them?
Rumsfeld: It could have been what has been indicated here, or it could have been something entirely different.
Q: Mr. Secretary, what about the attack on the convoy in the Paktia province? Have you gotten a report on that one yet?
That was another one that occurred about the same time.
Rumsfeld: I don't have one.
Q: Still nothing on these two leaders that were supposedly going to Hamid Karzai's inauguration?
Rumsfeld: No. I don't have anything. I'd have to go back and look at them.
Thank you very much.
Q: See you tomorrow.
Rumsfeld: Okay. Well, wait a minute.