NEWS TRANSCRIPT from the United States Department of Defense
DoD News Briefing
Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld
Saturday, Feb. 23, 2002
(Interview with Charles Moore, Editor of The Daily Telegraph; Sir John Keegan, Defence Editor; Toby Harnden, Washington
Bureau Chief; and David Wastell, Sunday Telegraph Washington Correspondent.)
Moore: Thank you very much for having us, which is a great honor. I think we're the first British newspaper that you've
seen since September 11th, so that's great. I just wanted to start by asking you what do you think you've won in
Afghanistan?
Rumsfeld: I think what the coalition forces have accomplished thus far would be, number one, the fact that the Taliban
no longer are the governing faction in that country. And in that sense, the people of Afghanistan have, in a significant
way, been liberated from the policies and the repressive actions of the Taliban government.
Second, the al Qaeda are no longer using Afghanistan as an effective worldwide base for training terrorists and for
organizing and conducting terrorist campaigns around the world. That is not to say that the Taliban are all gone, which
they aren't. A lot of them are still there in the cities and in the mountains and in neighboring countries. Nor is it to
say that the al Qaeda is not functioning. It just doesn't have Afghanistan as a haven to the extent it previously did.
Al Qaeda are still in the country in pockets and they're still in neighboring countries in larger numbers than pockets.
And they're still very dangerous.
Moore: I know the United States doesn't want to get bogged down there, but there's an ongoing problem about order there
and dangerous people regrouping, and so on, isn't there? There's a demand from the interim government that Western
presence spreads, which, if it did spread, would have to be guaranteed by the United States.
Where are you on that? Are you just wanting to get on and get out or are you --
Rumsfeld: We clearly have to consider that our first task is to continue to pursue the al Qaeda and other terrorist
networks and work to see that nation states are not actively harboring and encouraging or permitting or even tolerating
their activities. That has to be our first assignment.
When you say where am I on that issue of security in Afghanistan, I'm not an expert on Afghanistan, but my readings of
history suggest that it's never been a particularly secure place in recent memory. It's had tribal conflicts, it's had
criminals, and it's had significant drug trafficking in recent years. One would hope and want for the people of
Afghanistan that it be a relatively secure environment. It's not.
What will ultimately help to make it a more secure environment, it seems to me, is a decision on the part of a lot of
people in and out of the country, neighboring countries as well as your country and ours, that that's worth having and
that they're willing to invest some time and money and effort to see if that can't be achieved.
Is it possible for outsiders to help to create an environment that's more hospitable to normal living than has been the
case in the past? It probably is. Is that desirable on a permanent basis? Probably not. Foreign forces in that country
tend to ultimately be opposed by the people for whatever reason, or at least by factions of the people. And so what is
taking place at the present time within the United States government is a discussion about what's the best way to do it.
The United Kingdom, thank goodness, has stepped up and is leading the interim security assistance force and doing an
excellent job. It is helpful in Kabul, where they are. There is a discussion taking place in the UN, and other places,
about the possibility of expanding that to the other three, five or seven power centers in the country.
The alternative to that is -- there are several alternatives to that. One alternative is to get about the task of
helping to create an Afghan army, a multi-regional force that would be able to do what an international security
assistance force would be able to do -- reduce crime, provide some leverage for a central government as a counter-weight
to the armies that exist in the various regions of the country currently.
The advantage of the latter is, clearly, that it is indigenous. Ultimately, if you went with the former, to greatly
expand the international security assistance force, it would leave. I don't know how long -- a year, five, twenty? We've
been in the Sinai now for 22 years, which is unnatural.
I think it's always better if people can contribute to their own security than having what becomes a dependency develop
where the local people are frightened at the thought of taking out an international force, pulling it away, and allowing
an instability to be reinjected into the area.
My personal view is that things need to sort out on the ground at some point and that while foreign forces can go in
and be helpful for a period, they ought to have a strategy to be moved out, and for capabilities, indigenous
capabilities developed to take their place in a fairly rapid period of time -- months and years, not decades.
In between those two possibilities there are four or five other variants of it. Kofi Annan at the UN has some ideas
that are being circulated. Fahim Kahn has some ideas about the army there. What the United States will ultimately
decide, I don't know. But our forces are really trained, equipped and organized for warfare, more than for peacekeeping.
We do not have, for example, the kinds of capabilities that Spain, with the Guardia Seville; or the Italians with the
Carbinieri, a national police capability.
Moore: Would you like us, the British, to stay on then? We'll cease being the lead after 90 days.
Rumsfeld: I can't speak for the President. He obviously talks to the Prime Minister about those things.
If you're asking me as a citizen what I think about having British forces in there, I am absolutely delighted. They are
first rate, they're well trained and well equipped and well led. They do a superb job wherever they go. It just makes
everything that much easier to have the leadership of the British forces. Not just in the peacekeeping but also in the
other activities that they're engaged in with the war on terrorism.
Moore: I was just going to ask you about that. With our special forces there, what sort of contribution do you think is
being made by the British that added to the American contribution?
Rumsfeld: Essentially the same contribution that American Special Forces do. Their training is similar, their
capabilities are similar, they work very well together, have in many different locations around the world over the
years, and it's been terrific having them there, doing what they're doing.
I tend to not talk a lot about what other countries are doing because each country likes to characterize what they're
doing themselves, and they do it in a way that is comfortable for them politically. And some countries don't even want
it known that they have Special Forces, which is fair enough. So I begin with really just a wonderful appreciation for
what the coalition forces have done, and not just the U.K. but three or four dozen, five dozen, nations that have been
participating in ways that are comfortable to them and that they have the capabilities to do. It's been terrific. We've
got any number of countries --
I looked the other day and one category, that is to say ships, we had major activities going on in that part of the
world, and the U.S. ships were less than a third of the total ships involved.
Harnden: Can you, on Afghanistan, could the Americans and British have used their Special Forces more? If more boots
had been put on the ground, could more have been achieved in terms of destroying the al Qaeda leadership and the Taliban
leadership?
Rumsfeld: We'll never know, will we?
Q: Is it something that --
Rumsfeld: Historians will go back and try to answer that question and probably do it imperfectly.
Clearly, I don't think so. At no time was the issue that you raised the determining factor, that is to say, risk. If
you're talking about risk of lives. If you're going to put people's lives at risk, you'd better have a darn good reason,
and in this instance we did and we do. And the risk of putting people's lives on the line was not anything that was
inhibiting in terms of the number of people that should be put on the ground.
From the very outset, we had enormous pressure to put people on the ground. We did try to put them on the ground and we
did successfully do so, although it didn't happen in 24 hours. It took 48, 72 hours, a week, two weeks, whatever --
depending on weather, depending on the leadership in some of these tribal groups, whether or not they would accept it
immediately, how long it took to persuade them.
We were perfectly prepared to put large numbers of U.S. or coalition forces on the ground, and the fall of Kabul and
then the fall of other cities prior to that being needed meant that we didn't have to, but we were perfectly ready to do
that.
Harnden: Do you think that less use of tribal forces might have enabled you to get bin Laden or other al Qaeda leaders?
Rumsfeld: No, or we would have done it.
The country's borders are porous. We can't really effectively -- you folks live on an island. That's really quite nice.
I suspect it's not perfect, however, in terms of stopping things that you prefer not to come across your borders. But we
can't monitor the border with Canada if we had to. Fortunately, we don't have to, to any great extent. But you know,
deer and moose and elk walk back and forth, people walk back and forth. There are a lot of places you don't even know
where the border is. That's the way it is around Afghanistan. We had, in some cases, countries that were cooperating on
the border and in some cases they weren't. And in some cases, countries that were cooperating that were capable of doing
quite a bit, in some cases countries that were cooperative but were not capable of doing a great deal to stop the
outflow. We, in most cases, were able to put special forces or coalition forces and troops in position so that they
could serve as an anvil or a block if we were moving in from the ground with Afghan forces and special forces. But I
don't know how one would have done it. There's a lot of caves, a lot of tunnels, hundreds and hundreds of them.
Look how long it takes for your country or our country to get the people off the Ten Most Wanted list. It is very hard
to do.
Wastell: On that point, how confident are you that bin Laden will eventually be caught?
Rumsfeld: I don't know that it matters how confident I am. He either will or he won't. He'll either live or he'll die.
He's either in Afghanistan or he's some place else. We intend to find him if he's findable, and we intend to see that
he's brought to justice in one way or another. And I think that's the feeling of a lot of other countries.
He could walk in tomorrow and surrender and al Qaeda would still go on functioning. There's plenty of people who could
take over and have knowledge of how that apparatus works and where the bank accounts are and who the trained cells are,
and in what countries -- the 40, 50, 60 countries they're located in. It would be delightful if we could find him, but
the problem would not end if we do. And I assume we will, but what is that based on? It's based on no more than your
assumption or somebody else's assumption.
Harnden: After the President's State of the Union speech, you're clearly looking beyond Afghanistan. Could I ask you
about Iraq and, in particular, how strong you feel Saddam is at the moment compared with a decade ago, and what it might
take to oust him?
Rumsfeld: Let me set the context for Iraq. I have no interest in discussing Iraq particularly. What the President, or
other countries, will decide with respect to Iraq is something that's above my pay grade.
I'll be happy to answer a few questions about it, but I wouldn't want it to be set in a context that suggested that I
was flagging the possibility that Iraq is something that is of current interest to the United States, because I'm not in
a position to talk about that. Iraq is a lot weaker than it was ten years ago, in answer to your question.
On the other hand, repression works, and Saddam Hussein's regime is a vicious, repressive regime that has been capable
and very likely will be capable of maintaining control over the people of that country.
It is not a nation that one should sit back and hold your breath waiting for it to engage in a massive process of
self-reform.
Moore: Does that mean that, can you imagine -- How can you imagine change coming out? Would it be from --
Rumsfeld: Well, it won't. Absent some external event. Unlike Iran, which has a different set of circumstances, a
different set of pressures. In both cases the people are not as free as they are in your country or our country,
needless to say. But in Iran at least one senses that there is pressure from the young people and pressure from external
influences that are -- I have no idea what will happen in Iran, but one would think that Iran is distinctive from North
Korea or Iraq in terms of at least the possibility that there could be changes internally over some period of time.
Moore: Are you attracted by a sort of rough comparison with what happened in Afghanistan, the Northern Alliance and so
on -- in Iraq that might be Iraqi National Congress or other movements, or Kurds, or a mixture of all of them that can
overthrow Saddam?
Rumsfeld: Drawing a parallel with Afghanistan probably would be a mistake. I think that the parallel one can draw is
that if you think of the feeling in Afghanistan when music was played and women took off their burkhas and kites were
flown and that people were welcomed, that was a visible manifestation of the fact that people were being repressed and
that they wanted the al Qaeda gone and they wanted the Taliban gone. Now people had mixed reasons for wanting that. If
you're freer than you were, you're also freer to engage in the heroin trade as well as to fly a kite, or freer to be a
criminal than you might be in a repressive regime. But there's no question but that the people of Afghanistan were
relived to have that repressive regime gone and the so-called era of foreign al Qaeda invaders that had, in large
measure, taken over that country and exerted a great deal of control over them.
That would be similar in Iraq. Whether it would be that way in terms of organized factions as it was in Afghanistan I
think is a different question. But in terms of people, I mean, I don't know who it was that said it but there was some
truth to it, that there will be no peace in the world until every man is free because to every man he is the world. When
a person feels the absence of that and then sees the opportunity for freedom. Look at what happened at the end of the
Cold War. All these countries that were repressed and controlled by dictatorial governments suddenly fell.
Q: But you're clearly saying there has to be something that happens, that brings that about in the case of Iraq, that
--
Rumsfeld: Repression can go on for decades. It can go on from generation to generation. It can go on from politburo to
politburo.
Q: So it has to be lifted by some pretty big help pretty soon from the United States. That implies that --
Rumsfeld: In our lifetime we've seen it -- well, not ours. My lifetime. (laughter) Our lifetime. We've seen it happen
both ways. We've seen armies engage and one win and one lose and surrender on the battleship Missouri, if you will.
We've also seen constant, steady pressure over decades by people who invested and created institutions like NATO and
constrained an expansionist Soviet empire.
Q: Can you compare --
Rumsfeld: And finally it fell from within.
Keegan: Can you compare the war against terrorism with the Cold War? There isn't that clear target, is there? There
isn't the great mass of the Red Army staring at you.
Rumsfeld: Right.
Q: You've got to look for it.
Rumsfeld: Quite so. Exactly right. It's a much more shadowy target and enemy.
There are things you can compare, and there are a lot of things you cannot compare, in a way you would say, "well,
that's similar."
The big, visible Soviet Union and the pressure it was putting on continent after continent in Latin America and Africa
and the pressures in Central Asia and elsewhere was, I suppose, easier for people to focus on and be attentive to. On
the other hand it wasn't easy. It was hard. I used to have to fly back when I was Ambassador to NATO and testify in the
United States Senate against the so-called Mansfield Amendment which was to cut U.S. forces in Europe and stop support
of NATO to the extent we were supporting NATO. There were all these factions within your country and our country and
other countries in Western Europe that wanted to toss in the towel and not try to constrain that pressure that was being
asserted by the Soviet Union.
Keegan: When you were in Beirut in 1983, curiously, I was there at exactly the same time.
Rumsfeld: There was a lot of ordnance flying around.
Keegan: There certainly was.
You must have learned quite a lot about dealing with Arab/Islamic terrorism then. Does that give you some picture of
how the war on terrorism has to be fought?
Rumsfeld: It does. If you remember Beirut, and --
Keegan: I remember it very vividly, but --
Rumsfeld: So do I. (laughter)
If you think about it, there were first trucks filled with explosives that went into the U.S. embassy. Then to the
Marine barracks where 241 Marines were killed. The next thing you saw was cement barricades being built around all the
buildings, the embassies around the Corniche. Yours was very near to ours. And they put the same barricades around
barracks and military installations so trucks couldn't go in. The next thing that happened, they started lobbing
rocket-propelled grenades over the barricades.
So I think your building, or our building, ended up draping some sort of a wire mesh over the building so that it would
repel rocket-propelled grenades and bounce them off.
So they tried it first by truck, and we stopped that. Then they go in over the barricades and they bounce them off.
What did the terrorists do next? They went after soft targets going to and from the office, and started killing
individuals and groups of individuals.
The point being, the truth, and the truth is that terrorists have an enormous advantage. They can attack at any place,
at any time, using any technique and it's physically not possible to defend at every place at every time against
everything. If they want to give up their lives, they can do a heck of a lot of damage before their life is snuffed out.
Keegan: But there are soft points in a terrorist network.
Rumsfeld: You bet, but only if you go after the terrorist network. You can't defend except by offense --
Q: What I --
Rumsfeld: You must go after --
Keegan: I wondered was the lesson that you learned from Beirut - there's no good negotiating or talking to them. The
only thing they really understand is you hitting them as hard as they are trying to hit you.
Rumsfeld: Absolutely. And finding them where they are and rooting them out. That's what the President has understood
from day one it is about. That is what is happening. People are using the word presumption, but it is proactive. In a
sense someone can say that, but the reality is the only way to defend yourself is by going after them where they are.
Otherwise, you change your whole way of life. You're no longer a free person. You're living in a cave and hiding behind
barricades and things over your buildings and not being able to go out in the morning.
Keegan: Do you think, would it be a judgment of yours that paradoxically the leadership, terrorist leadership, is more
timorous than the terrorist foot soldier? That if you can threaten the terrorist leader, you may be able to strike a
deadly blow at the network.
Rumsfeld: I think the answer is "probably." The terrorist leadership leads and they lead by having the foot soldiers go
out and kill themselves and get killed. And they hold their coats and tell them they're going to go to heaven.
One would think that they'd have a certain respect for their own lives and their own importance and therefore they're
protective of themselves, and that's why people like UBL [Usama bin Laden] and [Mullah] Omar seem to move every six,
eight, ten, twelve hours. Not because they like to travel, I don't think, but they're survivalists. They want to live.
So we just have to keep after them.
What were you doing in Beirut when --
Keegan: Curiously, I was writing an article for the Atlantic Monthly, which was then the highest paying magazine in the
world. But I've been in other wars, but nothing has ever made me as frightened as Beirut.
Rumsfeld: The thing that finally got me out of there during the worst of it was Brigadier General Carl Steiner who was
then head of our Special Forces and was traveling with me for a period. He is quite well known today, a terrific person.
But we ended up, a helicopter was supposed to -- We'd been trapped in there for three or days while they were shelling
the house we were in. And we got in a car and with all this crazy driving -- my wife took some Dramamine. She was in
there with me that one time. We ended up in your embassy on those wooden pews that are in the front where all the people
come in to get visas, and she had taken two or three Dramamine and fell completely asleep in a flak jacket. I can still
picture her just out cold from the Dramamine waiting for a helicopter to come in and the only place we could go was your
embassy before we got out of there.
Keegan: There was an American colonel I spent some time with then who was head of the mission to train the Lebanese
National Army called Al Shaw. He was making very optimistic noises at the time, but he was a very fine officer. I liked
him very much. But it all fell apart, and --
Rumsfeld: It did.
Keegan: Did that fill you with any sort of lack of opportunism about the ability to create effective armed forces in
third world countries? Or do you think one shouldn't generalize from that?
Rumsfeld: I have that experience very much in my mind and recognize how difficult it is to do it. If war stops for a
period there is at least a possibility that you can fashion some sort of a coherent central government and people have
to have a stake in it and people at some point have to desire a relatively calm country so that they can go about their
business and go to school or work or trade or whatever they want to do.
Q: Can I just ask you about --
Rumsfeld: The only way to get that is to have some sort of a security force. And they have to decide that's what they
want. You cannot have a security force in a country that's multi-ethnic of one ethnic group.
Does that mean that this will work better than Lebanon? We'll not know for a period. But is there at least a
possibility it might? I think so.
Harnden: Let me just ask you about Saddam again. What sort of threat does Saddam pose to us, to the West in general,
and what's the time scale in this? How quickly does that threat need to be dealt with? And strong do you think the Iraqi
National Congress is, and could you see the INC seizing power in Iraq?
Rumsfeld: The focus on Iraq is something that I've found not helpful from my standpoint. I'm not in a position to
really discuss a lot of it, so I think I'll pass.
Moore: One thing that has come up with this, and it's not just Iraq, but because of the phrase axis of evil in the
State of the Union speech, you've got much stronger European criticism now of the United States position than you had in
the early days. And we've had Joschka Fischer and Hubert Vedrine, and Chris Patten, and they say, "You're unilateralist,
you're simplistic. It isn't really a war against terrorism. This is other ideas." Some of them are saying that it's
Rumsfeld's particular obsession or whatever.
Are you worried about European weakness or disagreement at this point? The tone has certainly changed.
Rumsfeld: Well, if one looks down from outer space on earth you find a couple of handfuls of countries that are
generally like-thinking and they tend to be in Western Europe and North America, that have freer political systems and
freer economic systems and tend not to covet the land or property or lives of other nations. So there's a natural
affinity between our country and your country and our European allies.
That being the case, one always would prefer that when you're engaged in something difficult that the interest and
goals and values would be shared by other like-thinking countries, and that tends to be the case. It is not always the
case, and it may not always be the case because one country's wrong, and it may also not be the case because other
countries are wrong. It may also be simply a matter of timing. And gosh, after living 70 years, I'm not surprised to
find that there are people that differ on these questions. They differ among themselves as well as between continents. I
no longer find it surprising.
I guess one other thing I've learned is that with leadership, if everyone waited until everyone agreed on everything
before one did anything, there wouldn't be such a thing as leadership. If people decide that something is important and
merits their effort and their thought and their treasure, allowing - you know, a simple way to say it is that the
coalition ought really not to determine missions. Missions determine coalitions. And one ought not to expect that every
country in the world's going to agree with everything --
Moore: But that has huge implications, doesn't it? Because the coalition, the main coalition for so long has been NATO
and NATO, though it immediately invoked Article 5, fundamentally hasn't got a lot to do with what's going on now, has
it? Do you think --
Rumsfeld: There are more coalition troops in Afghanistan than there are Americans. I cited a minute ago that there are,
there were twice as many ships in the waters south of Afghanistan than there were American ships. So I would think that
-- it's very easy to mischaracterize things and to say that countries in Europe don't agree, or are causing problems is,
I think, only very partially true. I think there are individuals who are. There are elements of political parties that
are.
What the people of Europe think you probably know a lot more than I do. I have the impression that there's just an
awful lot of support for the coalition in Europe among the population, and it may very well by that the fact that
newspapers and television and radio hype disagreement --
Q: That's right.
Rumsfeld: And elevate out some politician's words, and then the next day characterize it as European opinion as opposed
to the whims or words of a single individual or a small faction, it seems to me, is a misunderstanding of the situation.
Moore: But there do seem to be quite unorthodox events as a whole, events as everybody in the European elite, who are
saying things like, "you're unilateralists," "you're too assertive," that the State of the Union "axis of evil" speech
was just for internal consumption.
Rumsfeld: Let me come back to that "axis of evil" speech.
When President Reagan said that the Soviet Union was an evil empire everyone got all aflutter, all of the elites in the
world, and thought, "oh, my goodness gracious, isn't that something? This President of the United States really just
doesn't get it. He doesn't realize how important it is to have good relationships with Brezhnev" or whoever happened to
be the head at that time.
On the other hand, the people of Russia and the Russian republics I think probably had a very different view of that.
The people who had been in the gulags, the people that weren't allowed to vote freely, and weren't allowed to practice
their religion freely, and the people of neighboring countries that were being repressed, and the people on neighboring
continents that felt the Soviet Union was trying to expand its empire in their direction, they had quite a different
view of it. And that tended not to be carried in the press or carried in the televisions of the world.
Let's take North Korea. There are -- I've got to think of what's classified and what is not classified -- but let's
just for the sake of argument say there are tens and tens and tens and tens and tens and tens and tens of thousands of
Koreans in, political prisoners in prison camps. Camps, more than a handful of camps, that are the size of cities that
are being starved. Why are Korean people trying to get out of North Korean into China? It is a regime that is vicious,
it's developing weapons of mass destruction, and it is selling them all across the globe.
Now, if someone can come up with a better adjective than evil, fine. But to turn your head and pretend that's not going
on is wrong. Not only is it wrong, it is unhelpful if one cares at all about all those human beings. If one cares at all
about the risk that the world faces as we examine the nexus between countries like that and weapons of mass destruction
and their relationship with other nations of the world that they're willing to sell to, or other terrorist networks that
they're willing to sell to.
We're at a moment where we no longer have the margin for error we, as humanity, had decades ago, where our weapons were
relatively short range and where the warheads were relatively modest. Today, we're dealing with weapons of mass
destruction, with generally free and open societies, where the reach of those weapons is vastly greater than it was. The
lethality of those weapons is vastly greater than it was. And to sit back and say "oh, my goodness, he called those
countries an axis of evil. Isn't that terrible?"
Well, exactly what is terrible about it? I think putting the microscope, the headlight, on what is going on in those
three countries is just enormously valuable for the world, and it is constructive, it is enlightened, it is potentially
-- I don't doubt for a minute but that it's giving encouragement to those people. And I don't doubt for a minute, in
fact I know with certain knowledge that it's giving pause to those governments.
Moore: And it's giving irritation to you that people who say they are allies won't --
Rumsfeld: I didn't say that, you did. (laughter) I'm not irritated at all. I'm in here on a Saturday morning --
Sometimes I get a little energy in my voice is all, but no, I'm not irritated.
Keegan: Mr. Secretary, would it help, do you think, to call them weakly -- I mean North Korea, call it "weakly evil." I
always think one shove and that thing would fall over.
Rumsfeld: Why must we --
Q: (inaudible)
Rumsfeld: (laughter) We must not shove. Don't just write that as though I meant it.
I'm due for something else here, but --
Q: Let me just ask you, --
Rumsfeld: You're not wrong. It is a weak regime. It is a terrible regime. It is not so weak that it falls after decade
after decade, it remains. It is not so weak and so starved and so absent of hard currency that it can't develop nuclear
weapons and chemical and biological weapons. It's not so weak and starved and pitiful that it can't sell those weapons
across the globe. And for you to suggest that because it's starving, the country is starving, and because the government
is unsophisticated and a peanut compared to South Korea's vitality and energy and economic dynamism and military power,
the fact is they are making those weapons and they are selling those weapons and if you stick a biological weapon in
downtown London you will not say, "My goodness, aren't they weak?"
Keegan: I just like to soften up public opinion a bit there and say if you call them weakly evil you're preparing
Western public opinion for the sort of shove that will knock the beastly thing over.
Wastell: Can I ask you one last thing about our prisoners in Guantanamo Bay, I say our because there are five British
--
Rumsfeld: Right.
Wastell: What is the prospect for them?
Rumsfeld: Have you been down?
Wastell: I have not. My colleague went down.
Rumsfeld: What did you think of how they're being treated?
Harnden: Pretty well.
Rumsfeld: Pretty well. Would you do it better?
Harnden: Given that they're terrorist suspects who could possess information useful to the U.S. and its allies, no. I
don't think so. I think they're being treated in the right way.
Rumsfeld: Good. It's good to hear someone say that.
Wastell: I'm curious as to how long they're likely to be held, or do we know when the military tribunals, if there are
going to be such things, will be instituted?
Rumsfeld: A short answer is that the President has issued the military order allowing commissions to be held. He has
retained the authority to assign to the commissions the individuals who might be tried by the commissions and he has
assigned no one yet. We have fashioned sort of preliminary rules that we're now circulating for discussion as to how
they might be conducted. When the President will decide to assign someone to be tried by a commission, I do not know.
Moore: They could have capital punishment, could they?
Rumsfeld: Sure.
Second, the detainees. My goal is to have as few of them as is humanly possible. We are taking only those that we
believe there is a prospect of gathering intelligence from that can save people's lives, and we have been successful. We
are gaining a good deal of intelligence information that is enabling us to weave a fabric as to how this al Qaeda
functions, where it functions, who's involved, how it's financed, and along with the support of dozens of countries,
arresting people and interrogating them and closing bank accounts, the totality of that body of knowledge is growing
every day.
When we have gotten out of them the information that we feel is appropriate and possible, very likely we'll let as many
countries as possible have any of their nationals they would like and they can handle the law enforcement prosecution. I
have no desire to fill up our jails and spend time and money holding people. We have let a great many people loose who
seemed either to not have been appropriately detained in the first place, or whom we have looked at that the Afghans and
the Pakistanis particularly have held and decided we didn't need or want.
If we do transfer people back to the countries of their national origin, needless to say we'd be interested in finding
out what additional intelligence those countries might find.
But conceivably, if connections are later developed, having a chance to go back and interrogate those same people, and
we'd prefer to only give them back to countries that have an interest in prosecuting people that ought to be prosecuted
rather than simply turning them loose, putting them back out on the street and having them go get in more airplanes and
have them fly into the Pentagon and the World Trade Center again.
Q: Do we know whether --
Rumsfeld: We're really out of time. I'm afraid we really are out of time. Thank you.
Moore: This was tremendous.
Rumsfeld: Nice to see you.
Moore: Thank you.
Harnden: Good to see you, Mr. Secretary.
Abbie Trayler-Smith [photographer]: Mr. Secretary, could I just do a quick picture with you and the gentlemen together?
Rumsfeld: Oh, terrific, I'd be proud to. Let me put my papers down. Don't take my breeches because I've got my old
cords on today. Of course, you are all from Europe, so you get to look fine.
Smith: I have to say you're one of the most exciting people I've photographed. I've got some great shots.
Rumsfeld: Thank you, thank you. Good.
Moore: You're quite enjoying this, aren't you?
Rumsfeld: I'm finding it very interesting and important to do. And I've always enjoyed life, no matter what I'm doing. I
like people and I like ideas, and I've got a lot of energy, fortunately.
Moore: It's visible.
Harnden: How is world stardom treating you?
Rumsfeld: Oh, gosh. You know, I don't ever think about it. It's so funny. Guys walk up to me and say, "I've got to have
a picture with you." And I say, "Why?" And they say, "Well, because my 98-year-old grandmother is in a nursing home in
Louisville and she thinks you're wonderful."
We've got a thing called the AARP [American Association of Retired Persons], the association for older people. That's
what they say is my audience.