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US commander for Mideast resigns

US commander for Mideast resigns

WASHINGTON – The Navy admiral in charge of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan announced he will resign following press reports portraying him as opposed to President George W Bush’s Iran policy.

Admiral William J Fallon, one of the most experienced officers in the US military, said the reports were wrong but had become a distraction hampering his efforts in the Middle East. Fallon’s area of responsibility includes Iran and stretches from Central Asia across the Middle East to the Horn of Africa.”I don’t believe there have ever been any differences about the objectives of our policy in the Central Command area of responsibility,” Fallon said, adding he regretted “the simple perception that there is.”He was in Iraq when he made the statement on Tuesday.Defence Secretary Robert Gates told a Pentagon news conference that he accepted Fallon’s request to resign and retire from the Navy, agreeing that the Iran issue had become a distraction.But Gates said repeatedly that he believed talk of Fallon opposing Bush on Iran was mistaken.”I don’t think that there really were differences at all,” Gates said, adding that Fallon was not pressured to leave.”He told me that, quote, ‘The current embarrassing situation, public perception of differences between my views and administration policy, and the distraction this causes from the mission make this the right thing to do,’ unquote,” Gates told reporters.Fallon was the subject of an article published last week in Esquire magazine that portrayed him as at odds with a president eager to go to war with Iran.Titled ‘The Man Between War and Peace,’ it described Fallon as a lone voice against taking military action to stop the Iranian nuclear programme – Nampa-APFallon’s area of responsibility includes Iran and stretches from Central Asia across the Middle East to the Horn of Africa.”I don’t believe there have ever been any differences about the objectives of our policy in the Central Command area of responsibility,” Fallon said, adding he regretted “the simple perception that there is.”He was in Iraq when he made the statement on Tuesday.Defence Secretary Robert Gates told a Pentagon news conference that he accepted Fallon’s request to resign and retire from the Navy, agreeing that the Iran issue had become a distraction.But Gates said repeatedly that he believed talk of Fallon opposing Bush on Iran was mistaken.”I don’t think that there really were differences at all,” Gates said, adding that Fallon was not pressured to leave.”He told me that, quote, ‘The current embarrassing situation, public perception of differences between my views and administration policy, and the distraction this causes from the mission make this the right thing to do,’ unquote,” Gates told reporters.Fallon was the subject of an article published last week in Esquire magazine that portrayed him as at odds with a president eager to go to war with Iran.Titled ‘The Man Between War and Peace,’ it described Fallon as a lone voice against taking military action to stop the Iranian nuclear programme – Nampa-AP

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