Clinton tells Iraq: 'Bombs are a sign of success'
US SECRETARY of State Hillary Clinton said yesterday that last week's deadly bombings in Iraq are a sign that extremists are afraid the Iraqi government is succeeding.
Making her first trip to Iraq as America's top diplomat, Clinton said the country has made great strides despite the recent violence that killed at least 159 people on Thursday and Friday.
"I think that these suicide bombings… are unfortunately, in a tragic way, a signal that the rejectionists fear that Iraq is going in the right direction," Clinton told reporters travelling aboard her plane ahead of her unannounced visit to Baghdad.
"I think in Iraq there will always be political conflicts, there will always be, as in any society, sides drawn between different factions, but I really believe Iraq as a whole is on the right track," she said, citing "overwhelming evidence" of "really impressive" progress.
"Are there going to be bad days? Yes, there are," Clinton said. "But I don't know of any difficult international situation anywhere in the world or history where there haven't been bad days."
Clinton arrived a day after back-to-back suicide bombings killed 71 people outside the most important Shi'ite shrine in Baghdad. Those attacks came after Iraq on Thursday was rocked by its most deadly violence in more than a year when 88 people were killed by suicide bombers in Baghdad and Muqdadiyah, north of the capital.
She was met at the airport by the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mike Mullen, also on an unannounced trip to Baghdad, and the just-arrived new US Ambassador to Iraq, Christopher Hill, who presented his credentials to the Iraqi government late Friday.
Although the violence is at its lowest levels since the months following the 2003 US-led invasion, the latest bombings come amid an increase in high-profile sectarian attacks that have raised concerns about the abilities of Iraq's security forces.
They have exposed gaps in security as Iraq takes over from US forces in protecting the country and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has ordered a military task force to investigate the attacks as well as shortcomings that allowed the assailants to slip through. Clinton said she would press the Iraqis with US help to create a "non-sectarian security force that will not tolerate either sectarian actions or any kind of armed assault on the people of Iraq."
She was in Baghdad, following President Barack Obama's brief visit earlier this month, to assure Iraqi authorities of the administration's support even as it moves to draw down US military presence in the country.
"We want the Iraqi people to know that the US remains committed to helping them navigate through this period and have a better future," she said.
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Weather for Edinburgh
Friday 25 May 2012
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