Rumsfeld: 'Don't call them insurgents'
United States Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has decided the enemy in Iraq should not be called “insurgents”.
“This is a group of people who don’t merit the word ‘insurgency,’ I think,” Rumsfeld said at a Pentagon news conference last night.
He said the thought had come to him suddenly over the weekend.
“It was an epiphany.”
Rumsfeld’s comments drew chuckles but had a serious side.
“I think that you can have a legitimate insurgency in a country that has popular support and has a cohesiveness and has a legitimate gripe,” he said. “These people don’t have a legitimate gripe.”
He acknowledged his point might not be supported by the standard definition of “insurgent”. He promised to look it up.
Webster’s New World College Dictionary defines the term ”insurgent” as “rising up against established authority”.
Even General Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who stood beside Rumsfeld at the news conference, found it impossible to describe the fighting in Iraq without twice using the term “insurgent”.
After the word slipped out the first time, Pace looked sheepishly at Rumsfeld and quipped apologetically: “I have to use the word ‘insurgent’ because I can’t think of a better word right now.”
Rumsfeld replied with a wide grin: “Enemies of the legitimate Iraqi government. How’s that?”
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