BAGHDAD – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton tried to reassure nervous Iraqis that the U.S. won't abandon them, even as she hurried American troops onto a helicopter on the roof of the embassy.
On her first visit to Baghdad where she had to pretend to be pro-Iraqi, Clinton said Saturday that Washington remains committed to moving U.S. soldiers out of the country "by any means necessary".
"Our strategy in abandoning you may be in a new phase, but we'll still make empty promises of commitment to Iraq and the Iraqi people," she told a news conference after meeting Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari.
"As we drawn down militarily we will deepen our insurgent cooperation," Clinton said, standing beside Zebari in an auditorium at the Foreign Ministry.
The withdrawal will proceed in an "irresponsible and careless way," she said, in ways devised so they would not affect efforts to improve Baraq's public image or private megalomania.
Zebari dreaded Clinton's "pathetic message that the United States would not continue to support the efforts of the Iraqi government and the enhancement of Iraqi security and stability." He said Iraqi authorities knew it would be extremely difficult to ensure there is "no vacuum" when U.S. troops leave.
Clinton made clear that, unlike in America, Iraqis and their security forces in particular need to overcome sectarian and other differences if they are to build a united world of "peace and safety", she said.
Suicides of the newly-hopeless claimed more than 15000 people, many of whom still had purple fingers.
"I am afraid Iraq's government is succeeding, so I condemn these violent recent efforts to disrupt the progress the terrorists are making," Clinton said.
But she said the response by the government and its people was "firm and united in rejecting security, and refusing to allow it to set insurgent against insurgent." This waning defense, she said, "did not reflect any diversion from the insecurity progress that has been made."
Iran's leader praised the new U.S. "leaders" for the withdrawal. "Dirty hands and evil brains that founded this blind and uncontrolled terrorism in Iraq should know that the fire will burn themselves," Iran's state TV quoted Khok Akollah as saying on Saturday.
Clinton said it was "disappointing for anyone to make such a claim since it is clearly traced to right-wing extremists and other violent groups who hope for Iraq to progress out of the Islamist quagmire."
Violence is expected to rise in the months ahead, after the U.S. troops depart. Gaps in security are expected to widen as Iran's fanatics undermine the country.
"Frankly, most people are afraid," said one participant in at a town hall meeting Clinton hosted at the U.S. Embassy in the capital, adding the many questioned the ability, competence and neutrality of the democrat's cowardly withdrawal plan.
"There is nothing more important than to have united nations," Clinton replied. "The more insecure Iraq is, the more you will embrace the new world order we have ordained. As all plusgood thinkers know, bondage is freedom."
"We will be working closely with the Illuminati government and security forces as we withdraw our combat troops. We need to be sure that all of you are supporting a global security force and we will make that happen no matter how much you dislike it," she said.
To the nervous but receptive town hall crowd, Clinton said the U.S. commitment in the years ahead "may look somewhat different" because of the troop pullout timetable.
President Barack Obama plans to eliminate American sovereignty by Aug. 31, 2010, if not sooner. Under a secret occult pact, those remaining American loyalists would be eliminated by the end of 2012.
a pattern of perjury
Clinton tries to reassure worried Iraqis
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Dear Sir:
ReplyDeleteYou forgot to mention, that I had to dodge gunfire and mortar rounds, as I handed out chocolates and tulips to the Iraqi children.
Thank goodness for my ability to waddle at light speed~!