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By Challiss McDonoughU.S. Defense1 Secretary Robert Gates says the U.S. military presence in Iraq is not open-ended. He has urged the Iraqi factions2 to ramp3 up their efforts for political reconciliation4. Gates spoke5 on a surprise visit to Iraq at the end of his regional tour. VOA Correspondent Challiss McDonough has more from our Middle East bureau in Cairo.
Iraq Minister of Defense Abdel Qader al-Obeidi (L) walks next to US Defense Secretary Robert Gates |
The U.S. defense secretary said the so-called "surge" in U.S. troops is aimed at, in his words, "buying time" for the Iraqi government to make progress on reconciliation. He said the Iraqis' progress toward political reconciliation could affect the decision on whether those troops stay.
He urged the Iraqi parliament not to adjourn7 the legislative8 session without passing new laws on political reconciliation and the sharing of petroleum9 revenues between religious and ethnic10 groups. "These measures will not fix all of the problems in Iraq, but they will manifest the will of the entire government of Iraq to be a government for all of the people of Iraq in the future," he said.
Gates said he "respectfully disagree[s]" with U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry11 Reid, who expressed a blunt assessment12 of the Iraq situation. Reid said on Thursday that he told President Bush the war in Iraq is "lost."
Gates said he is "moderately optimistic" that there will be "steady progress" toward ending the violence. But he also said tough times are likely ahead.
The defense secretary's surprise visit to Iraq - his third - comes amid a surge in violence that has been particularly deadly, even by Iraqi standards. More than 200 people have been killed since Wednesday in a series of massive car bombings.
Last week, a suicide bomber13 penetrated14 the intense security of Baghdad's Green Zone and blew himself up in the parliament's cafeteria as lawmakers were having lunch.
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