CENTCOM's Gen. Franks: 'Iraq's Best Days Are Yet to Come'
| Friday May 9, 2003
By Kathleen T. Rhem WASHINGTON, May 9, 2003 – Fifty-two days after President Bush gave the go-ahead for military action in Iraq, the Army general who led the campaign stood in the Pentagon today and spoke of the mission's successes. "Today, the Iraqi people no longer live in fear of a regime of
Saddam Hussein," Gen. Tommy Franks, commander of the U.S. Central
Command, told reporters. "Key regime figures are being brought to
justice every day, one by one." Other high points of coalition intervention in Iraq:
Coalition forces are also working with the government of Kuwait to
find some 600 Kuwaiti citizens still missing from Iraq's 1990 invasion
of its southern neighbor. According to CENTCOM officials in southern
Iraq, experts are "exploiting" a mass grave found near Samawah.
Evidence at the site led the experts to believe the remains could be
those of missing Kuwaitis.
Franks noted that Iraqi citizens are forming local governments and
town councils. "Iraq's best days are yet to come," he said.
He echoed President Bush's May 1 comments aboard the aircraft carrier
USS Abraham Lincoln returning from the Gulf that major combat operations
in Iraq are over. But, Franks cautioned, American troops "still
stand in harm's way."
An American soldier from the Army's 5th Corps was killed in a bold
daylight shooting in eastern Baghdad May 8. CENTCOM officials in Iraq
said the soldier was directing traffic at about 1 p.m. local time
"when he was approached and shot by an unknown attacker with a
pistol." The attacker escaped.
"I have every expectation that we will continue to see pockets
of resistance, and we will see pockets of instability, and we will come
across difficult situations in the weeks and in the months ahead,"
Franks said. "But our forces are up to the task."
During the same briefing, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said
defense leaders track the status of 27 metropolitan areas in Iraq with a
color-coded system. Each city is assigned colors to indicate the status
of such things as the security situation, clean water and electrical
power.
Red indicates the situation is worse than it was at the beginning of
Operation Iraqi Freedom. Green means it is at pre-war levels, and blue
stands for better-than-pre-war levels. Rumsfeld explained that white
stood for "unobserved," but that all areas have been observed
by now.
"The reds have disappeared as of this morning," he added.
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