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Franks to speak Tuesday at Rushmore Plaza Civic Center.

Gen. Tommy Franks says progress is being made

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Gen. Tommy Franks, commander of U.S. Central Command during the outbreak of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, says the situation in both countries is improving but there is more work to be done in fighting the global war on terror.
Franks will speak in Rapid City at 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 15, at the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center Theatre, as part of the John T. Vucurevich Foundation speaker program.
Franks said in an interview Friday, April 4, that the Maliki government in Iraq is making progress, but there are bound to be stumbles along the way, instances of terrorists or other insurgent types who have occasional success.
Franks said there is little the U.S. government or military can do to prevent each specific instance of violence in Iraq, but what the U.S. can do is stay in the country and continue to provide support until the Iraqis develop the ability to take care of themselves.
"Ultimately, it's going to be the Iraqis, it's going to be the Afghans that are going to make that difference," Franks said.
Franks said American military levels will be reduced over time, but he doesn't have a guess how long that process will take.
"What we're looking for is to see a trend in that direction without specifically deciding we'll be at X-thousand people at a particular point," he said. "If you look at Europe, we've been in Europe a long, long time. If you look at Korea, we've been in Korea a long time. But I'd like to think we'll get to the point where we're there as invited guests and friends upon whom the Iraqis rely much less than they rely on us today."
Franks said the issue in Iraq is getting the various sects - Sunni, Shia and Kurds - to get along better. He believes progress is being made every day that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government responds to the needs of the Iraqi people.
While security issues are important, Franks said governance and economic conditions are equally important to the lives of average Iraqis - as they are to most Americans.
"I think everyday that we see the Maliki government responding to the needs of the Iraqi people is a positive way," he said. "That doesn't say they're doing everything they need to do, just as we would do it. That's not the case. They're stumbling as they move forward, but there are not so many people in this country, I think, who would say they are not making progress. In my view they are making progress."
Franks acknowledges mistakes were made following the invasion that in hindsight, knowing everything he knows today, he probably would have wanted done differently.
Looking back now, Franks said the Americans probably should have immediately hired the Iraqi army instead of allowing them to disband and go home.
Franks also said "the bar was probably drawn a little too high" when it came to "de-Baathification," or rooting out members of the Baath party, because it resulted in the loss of many middle-class bureaucrats in Iraq who joined the party for pure survival rather than sharing Sadaam Hussein's ideology.
"An awful lot of the middle class in Iraq were Baathists so if you're not real careful, what you do is remove the middle class from an evolving effort to build and strengthen governance," Franks said.
While Franks wishes those two things had been handled differently, he's not about to second guess decisions made after he retired in 2003. In fact, retired military officers who make statements second-guessing decisions made by current officers do not have Franks' respect.
"Any time you're away from something as complicated as the Iraq issue or Afghanistan or the global war on terror for six months or a year, factually, you do not know enough to be able to grade the paper of those who have come along behind you," he said. "In my view, it's pretty arrogant to say well, 'Boy, they're screwing it up. By golly, I could do better.'"
When it comes to Afghanistan and capturing or killing Osama bin Laden, Franks said it won't happen in that country. He believes bin Laden and much of the al-Qaeda leadership are holed up in an ungoverned portion of Pakistan.
Franks believes Pakistan's president, Pervez Musharraf, is a "great friend" of the United States and is doing every thing he can do to assist the effort to hunt terrorists. But there are portions of Pakistan that have been ungoverned since Pakistan was formed in the late 1940s.
"There are some outlaw areas inside Pakistan that have yet to be controlled by anyone, and I think most in the intelligence community believe that's where the core of al-Qaeda leadership is," he said.
When bin-Laden is finally dealt with, Franks said it won't be something broadcast live on television or done with tanks and large formations of soldiers walking in straight lines. It will be done stealthily, and with the cooperation of the Pakistani government.
Franks said Pakistan is helping as much as it can though he wishes they could be more helpful. But he said you have to be careful when a country has nuclear weapons and big chunks of its society are "right at the edge of being radical" that you don't cause a basically friendly government to be overthrown.
"I believe the Pakistanis are being helpful. I believe they will be even more helpful over time, unless we mess it up by demanding things that they simply cannot yet deliver," he said.
Concerning the U.S. presidential contest, Franks says he has not endorsed any candidate, but he hopes all candidates take a moment to focus on what's important for the country and not engage in as much vitriolic behavior, or "foolishness" as he calls it, on the campaign trail.
And Franks has no political aspirations for himself in the future.
"I believe you have to have certain characteristics to be a politician and I don't possess those characteristics," he said. "Politics is fascinating, and it's very much a part of American life. There are people very good at it, and I'm not one of them."
Contact Scott Aust at 394-8415, or scott.aust@rapidcityjournal.com
Gen. Tommy Franks' biography
Gen. Tommy Franks, an Oklahoma and Texas native, joined the United States Army in 1967, graduated from the Artillery Officer Candidate School and was commissioned a second lieutenant before being sent to Viet Nam, where he earned six awards for valor and three Purple Hearts.
In June 2000, he was promoted to four-star general and assigned as Commander-in-Chief, United States Central Command and led coalition forces in Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and Operation Iraqi Freedom in Iraq.
Franks has earned five Distinguished Service Medals, four Legions of Merit, four Bronze Stars and three Purple Hearts, in addition to numerous foreign awards. He was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) by order of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on May 25, 2004. And President George W. Bush awarded him the nation's highest civilian award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom on Dec. 14, 2004.
He earned a bachelor's degree in business administration from the University of Texas-Arlington, and a master's degree in public administration from Shippensburg University. He is also a graduate of the Armed Forces Staff College and the Army War College.
Since his retirement from the military in 2003, Gen. Franks has traveled the world speaking on leadership, character and the value of democracy.
If you go
What: John T. Vucurevich Foundation speaker Gen. Tommy Franks
When: 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 15
Where: Rushmore Plaza Civic Center Theatre
Cost: Tickets for Franks' Rapid City talk cost $3 for students with identification, $7 for everyone else. Tickets are available by calling 1-800-GOT-MINE or 394-4111; or online at www.gotmine.com

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