WASHINGTON - The Bush administration continues to insist Iraq is not heading
toward a civil war, even as some senators and military leaders have expressed
concerns that such a conflict may be inevitable.
"It would be, really, erroneous to say that the Iraqis are somehow making a
choice for civil war, or, I think, even sliding into civil war," Secretary of
State
Condoleezza Rice said Sunday on ABC's "This Week."
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice gestures
during a news conference near President Bush's Crawford, Texas ranch,
Sunday, Aug. 6, 2006. [AP]
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But Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., an influential member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, sounded more pessimistic and questioned whether the US
should keep sending more troops to Iraq.
Hagel said this country cannot "ask them to do the things that we're asking
them to do in the middle of a civil war, and that's where it's headed."
"We're ruining our United States Army. We are decimating our army. We can't
continue with the tempo and the commitment that we are on right now," Hagel said
on CBS "Face the Nation."
Early Monday, fighting erupted in a Shiite militia stronghold in Baghdad, and
a suicide bomber blew himself up among mourners at a funeral in Saddam Hussein's
hometown, killing 10 people and injuring 22.
Three US soldiers were killed late Sunday in a roadside bombing southwest of
Baghdad, the US military said. No further details were released.
Also Sunday, scattered clashes broke out between Shiite militiamen and Iraqi
soldiers near Hamza Square on the edge of Sadr City, police said.
The Bush administration has been reluctant to characterize the sectarian
violence in Iraq as a civil war. But on Thursday, Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Gen. John Abizaid, the top US commander in the
Middle East, told a Senate committee that it could lead to that.
Another senator was even more pessimistic Sunday.
"This is a civil war. I think the generals, the other day, were cautious in
their language. But I think they were telling us something loud and clear to
anyone who wanted to listen," Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., said on "Face the
Nation." "I frankly don't believe that US military people can necessarily play
referee in that kind of a situation."
Both Dodd and Hagel encouraged more involvement and discussions with other
countries in the Middle East. Hagel said
President Bush should get his
father and former
President Clinton involved in a regional summit. But
he also acknowledged that the prospects for success would be unlikely.
"There are no good options here, no good options," said
Hagel.