Rumsfeld Speech at NATO 12-06-03
Press Conference
by Donald Rumsfeld,
US Secretary of Defense
I thanked our Allies for their strong support in the global war on terrorism, and especially in Operation Iraqi Freedom.
We enthusiastically welcomed the seven invitees who joined in the meetings of the Defence Planning Committee and the
North Atlantic Council.
Since the end of the Cold War we've now invited a total of ten new Allies. Many of them, of course, were former Warsaw
Pact adversaries. I think it says a good deal about how much Europe has changed in the past decade. Certainly it's
changed a great deal since I was here as U.S. Ambassador to NATO three decades ago.
Who could have imagined back then that Poland would not only be a NATO Ally, but would be receiving force generation
support from NATO to lead an element in Iraq?
The presence of these new seven members, I think, will change NATO for the better. I mentioned to the incoming defence
ministers that they have certainly not been invited, their countries have not been invited to NATO as junior partners.
They have been invited to full membership and to exercise leadership.
Since the Prague Summit NATO has made some truly historic decisions, if you think about it. NATO decided to undertake
operations under Article 4 to defend Turkey against the threat posed by Iraq's weapons. NATO decided to support German
and Dutch forces leading ISAF in Afghanistan, ISAF 3, and to consider taking a NATO lead for ISAF 4. And last month NATO
decided to support Poland as it leads one of the three division headquarters in Iraq for stability operations.
These decisions, I think, very clearly underscore NATO's recognition that in the 21st century security environment we
have to be able to conduct multiple operations at a wide variety of locations across the globe.
In the Defence Planning Committee today Admiral Ed Giambastiani gave a briefing on some initial results from the lessons
learned activity from the Operation Iraqi Freedom.
We had probably the most comprehensive effort to achieve lessons learned. It involved something in excess of a 100
people who began immediately with the beginning of the conflict, and these lessons underscore the importance of the two
initiatives which NATO approved at this meeting. One is the new command structure, which is... really it's an historic
change. And the second being the NATO Response Force. These are each enormously important activities, and not easy to
achieve, I would say. If one thinks back to the prior meeting and then the one before that, there was a great deal of
scepticism expressed by a lot of people as to what would happen to the NATO Response Force. Would it, in fact, get the
support of countries, and what would happen to the effort to transform our command structure in a way that would fit the
21st century.
And yet the command structure restructuring has now been agreed to. It is significant, and the progress in the NATO
Response Force I think is impressive. It suggests something about NATO's health, I would submit.
Finally, I discussed the U.S. concern about the lawsuit that's recently been filed in a Belgium court against General
Tom Franks and against Colonel Brian McCoy, alleging that they were responsible for war crimes in Iraq, as well as suits
that have been filed here in Belgium against former President Bush, George Herbert Walker Bush, as opposed to George W.
Bush; General Norman Schwarzkoff, Vice President Cheney and Secretary Powell.
The suits are absurd. Indeed, I would submit there's no general in history who has gone to greater lengths than General
Franks and his superb team to avoid civilian casualties. I'm told that the suit against General Franks was effectively
invited by a Belgium law that claims to give Belgium courts powers to try the citizens of any nation for war crimes.
The United States rejects the presumed authority of Belgium courts to try General Franks, Colonel McCoy, Vice President
Cheney, Secretary Powell and General Schwarzkoff, as well as former President Bush.
I will leave it to the lawyers to debate the legalities. I'm not a lawyer, but the point is this: By passing this law
Belgium has turned its legal system into a platform for divisive politicized lawsuits against her NATO allies.
Now it's obviously not for outsiders, non-Belgians, to tell the Belgian government what laws it should pass and what it
should not pass. With respect to Belgium's sovereignty we respect it, even though Belgium appears not to respect the
sovereignty of other countries.
But Belgium needs to recognize that there are consequences to its actions and this law calls into serious question
whether NATO can continue to hold meetings in Belgium and whether senior U.S. officials, military and civilian, will be
able to continue to visit international organizations in Belgium. I would submit that could be the case for other NATO
Allies as well.
If the civilian and military leaders of member states cannot come to Belgium without fear of harassment by Belgium
courts entertaining spurious charges by politicized prosecutors, then it calls into question Belgium's attitude about
its responsibilities as a host nation for NATO and Allied Forces.
For our part, we will have to seriously consider whether we can allow senior uniformed and civilian officials to come
Baghdad... to Belgium, I mean, because of the charges flowing out of the suits in Baghdad... the activities in Baghdad,
which of course, would involve other coalition nations as well.
Certainly until this matter is resolved we will have to oppose any further spending for construction for a new NATO
headquarters here in Brussels, until we know with certainty that Belgium intends to be a hospitable place for NATO to
conduct its business, as it has been over so many years.
And with that, I'll be happy to respond to questions. Yes.
Questions and answers
Q: The House of the Representatives asked you to make a study about what you just talked about, opportunity to stay in
Belgium for the headquarters of NATO. Is that the answer of the beginning of that process you're talking about?
Donald Rumsfeld: No. I was not even aware of that until I just walked in the room that the House had passed that
request. What I've said is simply the administration position.
Q: So is that a clear threat to the Belgium government or Belgium Parliament that if they don't change the law NATO
could leave Belgium?
Donald Rumsfeld: No, there's no threat at all. I'm just... have stated a fact that it would be obviously not easy for
U.S. officials or potentially coalition officials, civilian or military, to come to Belgium for meetings, and therefore
my position, and our position, is that it does not make much sense to build a new headquarters if you couldn't come here
for meetings.
But there's no threats. Belgium can do... will do whatever it wishes to do.
Q: Secretary, Jamie McIntyre from CNN. There's been rather intense fighting in Iraq over the last several days, as the
U.S. has been trying to root out the remnants of Saddam Hussein's regime. In fact, a helicopter was shot down today.
My question is: Was the U.S. premature in announcing an end to major combat operations before you account for Saddam
Hussein and finished the job of eliminating his regime? And what would you say to the U.S. troops in Iraq, particularly
the members of the 3rd Infantry Division who we're discovering are quite disappointed to not be coming back to the
United States, but instead to be assigned new dangerous combat duties in Iraq?
Donald Rumsfeld: Well, the answer to the first portion of your question is no. It was perfectly appropriate to state the
truth, and the truth was that major combat operations had been completed and at the same time we said that there were
still remnants of the Saddam Hussein regime that would need to be dealt with. And the announcement that was made was
completely accurate.
What happened was most of the battles took place in the south, and there was very little north of Baghdad. The forces
there collapsed and disappeared into the countryside, and obviously there are still Fedayeen Saddam Forces and Bath
Party elements and I suspect other elements of the Special Republican Guard, conceivably, that are operating in those
areas in small groups.
The task of the coalition forces is to root out the remnants of these enforcers from the Saddam Hussein regime and
that's what they're doing. The comment you made about the 3rd Infantry Division is interesting. It's beyond me how you
could conceivably know what the centre of gravity of the people in that entire outfit think, but they have done a superb
job. Some of them have been there since late last year. A large number of the others have been there since early this
year, which is less than six months, and we had had a force flow program so that the troops that have been there the
longest will be rotated out in an orderly way, as we always do and my... I was over there recently and my impression is
that the morale is quite high on the part of the 3rd ID soldiers and it ought to be. They've done an absolutely superb
job.
Q: Robert Vanderhof, NRC Handelsblad from The Netherlands. Secretary Rumsfeld, you have been a leader of the war against
Saddam Hussein which was launched because of his weapons of mass destruction. At this moment these weapons have not been
found and you are publicly guessing where they are. Don't you feel that you are losing some credibility as leader?
Donald Rumsfeld: We have felt all along and when the UN inspectors were in there, that trying to find the weapons of
mass destruction in Saddam Hussein's program would be very difficult for the inspectors, and that the way they could be
found, while the inspectors were there, was by taking individuals out of the country, protecting them, protecting their
families, providing them a way that they can have a life and not have to fear for their lives, and that it would be only
through the information from people who were directly involved in the programs that we would find the weapons. We never
believed people would just go out and be able to find a site, trip over it, discover it and say eureka, we found it.
The same thing's true on the ground, it's a country the size of California. We have not found Saddam Hussein either, and
I don't think anyone's wondering if he was really there. He was, and what we are doing currently is going about the
business in an orderly way, inspecting suspect sites, interrogating people that we've been able to gain custody of, and
as the interrogation project continues, my guess is that what will take place is over a period of some time we'll find
individuals, indeed, I can say already we are finding individuals, who have been involved in programs, and we'll find
documentation and we'll find computers and things that will enable us to go find the remnants of their programs.
Q: Secretary Rumsfeld, Jan Balliauw of Belgium Television.
Donald Rumsfeld: Pardon me?
Q: Jan Balliauw, Belgium Television. You said that NATO headquarters cannot function anymore with this Belgium law,
universal jurisdiction...
Donald Rumsfeld: Oh, I didn't say that. I speak fairly precisely, I hope, most of the time, and what I... I won't repeat
what I said, but NATO headquarters is functioning. It would just be difficult if people are not able to come to meetings
here.
Q: Does that mean that the headquarters has to move out of Brussels?
Donald Rumsfeld: All I'm saying is that they... we have a situation where former President Bush, Secretary Powell, Vice
President Cheney, General Schwarzkoff, General Tom Franks and Colonel McCoy have all been charged, already, with war
crimes in this jurisdiction. And that creates a problem. It creates a problem that's obvious. It doesn't take a genius
to understand that that is a problem. If anyone who comes here who's a senior coalition military or civilian officials
is going to be subjected to harassment of spurious lawsuits and be forced to spend large sums of money attempting to
defend themselves against this type of thing, then people are not going to want to come here. And that's really a
judgement for Belgium as a sovereign nation. They can decide what they want to do.
It's perfectly possible to meet elsewhere. But what will happen I just don't know. All I'm doing is stating the problem.
And what the solution will be, I think, is really more up to Belgium and up to NATO than up to the United States.
Q: (inaudible)... Mr. Secretary, can you comment on the Spanish decision to send its troops to Polish sector in Iraq,
and do you see any further role of NATO in Iraqi stabilization?
Donald Rumsfeld: I think that's possible and certainly a large number of NATO countries are already assisting and a
number of others have volunteered to offer both, in some cases, troops, and in other cases various types of
reconstruction assistance. But that's a decision for NATO to take.
With respect to the Spanish decision, we are very pleased that Spain has decided to send a significant number of troops
and to participate in the sector that Poland is heading up and we think that's a good thing for both countries, and for
that sector.
I think there's something like... I could be wrong, but I think it's... correct me if I'm wrong somebody, the last time
I looked there are about six or eight countries that have committed troops and there are something like 40 or 41
countries that are currently discussing various levels of troop assistance in Iraq. And the central command is working
with them to try to patch together the elements that from the plus or minus, you know, three dozen countries, into
organizations that will be successful and be able to do their work effectively and we believe that... we already have,
obviously a number of coalition forces in the country, there's something like 12,000 or 13,000 there at the present
time, and that number will grow substantially as we go through the coming oh two or three months, one would think.
And the United States, President Bush has said very clearly that we intend to have as many U.S. troops there as is
necessary to assure the kind of security that will enable the Iraqi people to have an environment that permits them to
begin to rebuild their country and to get themselves on a path towards a... first, one would think, an interim authority
of some type and then a constitutional convention and an Iraqi Constitution that fits Iraq and then an Iraqi government.
It takes some time obviously. They don't have any recent experience with representative government and civil society.
They've been living under a vicious dictatorship. And as a sign of how vicious it is, we keep finding additional mass
graves with thousands of remains of human beings that were killed and piled in these mass graves. And it is a sight to
behold.
We'll make this the last question.
Q: Stephen Cassel(?) from The Independent. Lord Robertson has been telling us today that NATO has recovered remarkably
since the crisis over Iraq, yet here you are today saying that the U.S. may not even be able to send officials to NATO
headquarters because of a lawsuit against General Tommy Franks. Doesn't that prove precisely that the crisis over Iraq
is alive and well, and that NATO is still caught slap-bang in the middle of it?
Donald Rumsfeld: Oh I'm sure that there are those who would be delighted if NATO were slap-bang in a crisis, but Lord
Robertson's correct, we're not in a crisis. It seems... I've been around NATO for decades, and I've never seen a time
when somebody didn't say NATO's history, NATO's about done, NATO's in a crisis, oh my the sky is falling.
This organization is healthy. We've had superb meetings. It's moving forward to transform itself to fit the 21st
century. The NATO Response Force is a significant activity. The fact that these... whatever it is... I guess it was just
19 countries that worked through the command structure changes, that they could do that and have significant reductions
in the numbers of headquarters, and in the numbers of CAOCs, is not nothing. I mean, I'm trying to do it in the United
States and it isn't easy. It's hard work. It's hard work with one country. But to do it with 19 countries is a
significant accomplishment.
And the answer to your question is flat no. You are wrong, there is not a major crisis. We will get through this and not
to worry.
Q: (inaudible)... meetings but possibly somewhere else?
Donald Rumsfeld: I didn't say that.
Thank you.