'World is Safer Now,' say US Officials on Anniversary of Ira(在线收听

'World is Safer Now,' say US Officials on Anniversary of Iraqi Invasion

 

Paula Wolfson

 

The Bush administration is marking Friday's one-year anniversary of the invasion of Iraq with a weeklong series of high-profile speeches and broadcast interviews. Three of the president's top advisors on Iraq spoke out Sunday in appearances on American television.

 

All three stressed that one year after the invasion of Iraq, the world is a safer place.

 

White House National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice told NBC's Meet the Press that Iraq under Saddam Hussein posed a greater threat than North Korea.

 

"I believe to this day that it was an urgent threat. This could not go on and we are safer as a result because today Iraq is no longer going to be a state of weapons of mass destruction concern."

 

In a subsequent interview on ABC's This Week, Secretary of State Colin Powell defended the information used to justify the invasion. He strongly denied the Bush administration exaggerated the threat posed by Iraq, even though no weapons of mass destruction have been found.

 

"We may not find the stockpiles. They may not exist any longer. But let's not suggest that somehow we knew this. We went to the United Nations, we went to the world, with the best information we had. Nothing was cooked."

 

Secretary Powell emphasized progress in Iraq over the last year, and noted the country is taking steps toward democracy with a transfer to Iraqi sovereignty scheduled for the end of June. Speaking on the CBS program Face the Nation, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld emphasized the country is on the right track, noting the rapid increase in Iraqis joining their new national security force.

 

"We are making very good progress with respect to the Iraqi security forces. There are over 200,000 Iraqis that have been trained and equipped and deployed and out providing security. There are more Iraqi security forces being killed than coalition security forces."

 

President Bush will personally mark the one year anniversary of the invasion of Iraq with a speech Thursday at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. On Friday, he will visit with wounded soldiers at an army hospital and will address the ambassadors of countries that have contributed to the U.S.-led coalition that invaded both Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

 

注释:

anniversary [7Ani5vE:sEri] n. 周年纪念

advisor [Ed5vaIzE(r)] n. 顾问

NBC  abbr.  National Broadcasting Company 国家广播公司

pose [pEuz] v. 形成, 引起, 造成

North Korea  朝鲜

subsequent [5sQbsikwEnt] adj. 后来的, 并发的

ABC  abbr. American Broadcasting Company  美国广播公司

Secretary of State Colin Powell (美国现任)国务卿鲍威尔

defend [di5fend] vt. 辩护

stockpile [5stCkpail] n. 库存,仓库

cook [kuk] v. 伪造

on the right track 在正确道路上,方向正确

Iraqi [i5rB:ki] n. 伊拉克人

deploy [di5plCi] v. 展开, 配置

Afghanistan [Af5^AnistAn] n. 阿富汗(西南亚国家)

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2004/1/3100.html