FORMER US president Bill Clinton said Iraq needed to get a government up and running soon to stop the strife-torn country from becoming a "launching pad" for terrorists. He told BBC television this morning that rather than withdrawing US troops from Iraq, he would concentrate first on setting up a unity government that could command the support of different factions within the country. Asked if history would judge the current instability, sectarian violence and political vacuum in Iraq as a "Vietnam in the making", Mr Clinton said that depends on what happens now.
Earlier, insurgents carried out a series of attacks killing eight people, five of them from one Shiite family as the civil strife showed no sign of abating. "The most important thing is to talk about what might offer a way out," Mr Clinton said. "I think this has happened because it's been a long time since the election and no government has been stood up. "The increased capacity of the security forces to do their job therefore is largely irrelevant because they're not working on behalf of a coherent government which seems to have the allegiance of a majority of Shias, Sunnis and
Kurds.
"So the number one thing they've got to do is to realise they had this enormous turnout and Iraqis who risked their lives to vote, and they have gotten nothing for it. "There is no functioning government that can hold the country together and stop it from becoming a launching pad for terrorists." Iraqi parliamentarians met overnight to move forward the arduous negotiations on forming a government but could not reach a consensus. Talks had been suspended since Wednesday in a dispute between the dominant Shiites and minority Sunnis over who should oversee the security portfolio.
Efforts to form a government have dragged on since the December election in arguments over cabinet posts and rejection by the Kurds and Sunnis of incumbent Shiite Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari's candidacy to keep his job. Mr Clinton, whose eight-year term in office ended in 2001, was asked if he would withdraw US troops from Iraq were he still in power. "What I would do is focus on getting the government up and going, that could command the support of the country," he replied. "The security forces of the Iraqis are capable of doing a lot more protection work. If we had an ongoing government, America could reduce its forces more, put them in safer areas and change the composition. "You could have more special forces, more Arabic speakers, more intelligence people, they could be brought forth when they're needed."
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