Cheney defends U.S. policy in Iraq

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U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney will arrive in Japan Tuesday for a three-day visit to discuss North Korea, Iraq and Afghanistan with top Japanese officials.

U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney said on Wednesday the United States wants to finish its mission in Iraq and “return with honor,” despite the war’s growing unpopularity at home and doubts among U.S. allies.

Cheney’s visit to Tokyo comes just weeks after Japan’s defense minister said starting the Iraq war was a mistake and its foreign minister called the U.S. occupation strategy “immature.”

The remarks forced Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whom Cheney meets later in Wednesday, to scurry to reassure Washington that Tokyo’s backing for U.S. policy in Iraq was unchanged.

But a survey released on Tuesday showed most Japanese voters agreed with Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma when he said U.S. President George W. Bush was wrong to start the war.

In a speech delivered aboard the USS Kitty Hawk aircraft carrier at Yokosuka Navy Base near Tokyo, Cheney said: “We know that terrorist attacks are not caused by the use of strength, they are invited by the perception of weakness.”

“We know that if we leave Iraq before the mission is completed, the enemy is going to come after us. And I want you to know that the American people will not support a policy of retreat,” he added.

“We want to complete the mission, we want to get it done right, and we want to return with honor,” said Cheney, who heads on Thursday for Australia to meet Prime Minister John Howard, another staunch supporter of Bush’s Iraq policy.

Bush is sending 21,500 more troops to Iraq, but Democrats in charge of U.S. Congress are pressing for a change in strategy.

British media reported that Prime Minister Tony Blair was set to announce on Wednesday that Britain would start to withdraw its 7,100 troops from Iraq within weeks.

Blair was expected to say the withdrawal reflected Britain’s success in southern Iraq, where control of security is being handed back to Iraqi forces, according to the media reports.

In talks earlier with Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki, Cheney thanked Japan for the roughly 550 non-combat troops it sent to southern Iraq in 2004 as part of Tokyo’s largest and riskiest overseas mission since World War Two.

The soldiers returned home last July, but about 200 Japanese air force personnel based in Kuwait are still transporting supplies to the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq.

Cheney also sought to allay any fears that Washington’s commitment to Japan and the Asia-Pacific would falter.

“The president asked me to make this journey, first to Japan, then to Guam, and then to Australia ... to reaffirm America’s deep commitment to a forward presence in the Asia-Pacific region,” he said in his speech.

The United States has about 50,000 troops based in Japan, about half its total military presence in the region.

The two allies agreed last year to reorganize those forces, including shifting 8,000 Marines from Japan’s southern island of Okinawa to the U.S. Pacific territory of Guam by 2014.

Cheney and Shiozaki agreed in their talks that a multilateral energy-for-arms forged in Beijing last week was a step in the right direction, a statement by the Japanese side said.

Abe insists Tokyo will not provide economic aid to fund the deal until progress is made on resolving a feud over Japanese citizens kidnapped by the North’s agents decades ago.

Under the deal among the United States, China, Japan, the two Koreas and Russia, Pyongyang will receive fuel aid in return for shutting down and eventually disabling its nuclear facilities.

Cheney, who last visited Japan in 2004, is not scheduled to meet outspoken Defense Minister Kyuma.

He will, however, find time in his tight schedule to meet with the parents of one abductee early on Thursday morning, before leaving for Australia.

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