Washington - US Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld late Wednesday reversed 
a decision to skip a public hearing on Capitol Hill and said he will testify at 
a session on the Iraq war. 
 
 
 |  US Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld 
 listens to questions during a press briefing at the Pentagon, Wednesday, 
 Aug. 2, 2006. [AP Photo]
 | 
The move came after hours of criticism and pressure from US Senate Democrats 
who urged him to come before the Senate Armed Services Committee to answer 
questions about the administration's Iraq policies. Earlier Wednesday, Rumsfeld 
had said that his crowded calendar did not allow him to be present for the 
meeting Thursday morning, but he agreed to attend a private, classified briefing 
in the afternoon with the entire Senate. 
Speaking to Pentagon reporters earlier Wednesday, Rumsfeld suggested that 
complaints about his decision could be politically motivated. 
"Let's be honest: Politics enters into these things, and maybe the person 
raising the question is interested in that," said Rumsfeld, without identifying 
anyone. The defense secretary said he had testified in the past and was not 
reluctant to face off against some of the committee's more vocal war critics, 
including Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. 
No reason for the change was provided by the Pentagon. The committee said the 
Pentagon called and said the secretary would now be testifying, 
Rumsfeld's initial plan not to testify had drawn protests committee 
Democrats, who said much had changed in the six months since he last testified 
and took questions from the committee. The request for his appearance came from 
the committee chairman, Sen. John Warner, R-Va., and the top Democrat, Sen. Carl 
Levin of Michigan. 
"Secretary Rumsfeld's eleventh-hour decision to reverse course and appear at 
tomorrow's open Armed Services Committee hearing is the right one," said Sen. 
Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., who had sent him a letter urging him to testify. 
Kennedy had also said that Rumsfeld should attend the hearing "to explain and 
defend his policies in full public view tomorrow." 
Rumsfeld's relations with Congress have been testy at times and he has 
occasionally resisted testifying publicly on controversial subjects, including 
the debate over whether high-level officials should be held accountable for the 
prisoner abuse scandal at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. 
Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Gen. John 
Abizaid, chief of US Central Command, also are testifying Thursday. 
Rumsfeld last appeared before the committee on Feb. 7, when he and Pace were 
questioned about the war's strain on the military. He has testified at 
appropriations hearings, however, and has met with lawmakers in a number of 
classified briefings. 
In the last six months, the number of US troops in Iraq has dipped but now is 
back up to about 133,000, as part of an effort to quell the violence in Baghdad. 
The total could exceed 135,000 in the weeks and months ahead. 
In other comments, Rumsfeld and Pace, citing intelligence concerns, 
sidestepped a question about whether they have seen evidence that Iran is 
supporting Hezbollah in its fight against Israel. 
Rumsfeld said it is evident that Hezbollah is using Iranian weapons, adding, 
"Hezbollah's a terrorist organization, and Iran's their principal financial and 
military supplier and supporter. The linkage is tight." 
Rumsfeld also offered an explanation for why as many as two-thirds of the 
Army's brigades and many National Guard units are rated not ready for combat. He 
said the Pentagon is wrestling with standards that would best describe the 
condition of the units. And he noted that highly experienced units coming home 
from Iraq leave a lot of equipment behind and as a result are considered not 
combat ready. 
"The Army today is vastly better than it was two, four, six or eight years 
ago," he said. "It has much more equipment, much better equipment, and it's 
better trained and more experienced." 
He and Pace also said that funding to address the National Guard's needs, 
which equal about $21 billion through 2011, has been included in budget plans 
over the next five years.