Even assuming Iraq forms a national government, there will be no immediate
end to the violence, nothing like V-E Day marking World War II's end in Europe,
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Wednesday.
Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice listens to a question from the audience after delivering
remarks to the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations Wednesday, April 19,
2006 in Chicago. [AP] |
Peace will come gradually to Iraq, more than three years after the U.S.-led
invasion in March 2003, she said at the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations.
"Americans must be prepared for violence to continue in Iraq, even after a
government is formed. There will be no Iraqi equivalent of V-E Day or V-J Day,"
Rice said. Those are the days of Victory in Europe and Victory in Japan in 1945.
"Rather, peace will be secured as more and more Iraqis recognize that the
democratic process is open to them and that politics, not violence, is the best
way to achieve their interests and redress their grievances," she said. "This is
how democracy will conquer terrorism, but it will do so gradually."
Iraqi leaders planned to convene parliament on Thursday in hopes of trying
again to form a government, a process stalled for months over the choice of a
prime minister. Shiite officials, however, indicated they might not attend.
President Bush said Wednesday that failure in Iraq "is not an option."
Rice said she and Bush understand Americans' concerns over the impasse. She
added Iraqis are beginning to voice their frustrations, too.
The Senate's second-ranking Democrat noted that Rice, in remarks to the same
foreign affairs group in October 2003, asked Americans to be patient with
rebuilding efforts. Rice's words then were: "Our own history should remind us
that the union of democratic principle and practice is always a work in
progress."
Yet today, said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, "the Iraqi people are still not
self-governing, basic services still are not being provided, whether it's water
or electricity, and there still isn't peace or safety in the streets."
Rice also discussed Iran and its nuclear program, saying she thinks "we can
make the diplomacy work."
Bush says "all options are on the table" to prevent Iran from developing
atomic weapons, but that he is focusing on diplomacy.
The U.N. Security Council has issued an April 28 deadline for Iran to stop
uranium enrichment. But council members Russia and China have resisted punishing
an important trading partner.
"You know that there are states that have been saying if we don't get
meaningful measures inside the Security Council, perhaps a coalition of the
willing will think about other financial or political measures that could be
taken," Rice said.
Iran says its nuclear work is for peaceful purposes such as generating
energy; the U.S. has accused Iran of seeking nuclear weapons.
Rice touched on the administration's plan to share nuclear technology with
India for its civilian program. She said she often is asked whether such a plan
creates a double standard regarding U.S. nuclear policy on North Korea and Iran.
"Absolutely there's a double standard," one that Iran and North Korea created
by "cheating on their obligations" to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and
being "closed societies where everybody worries what they're doing."
By contrast, she said, "You have a democracy in India that is trying to move
closer to the nonproliferation regime, and we ought to support
that."