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New US commander for Mideast strikes upbeat note
17 Mar 2007 16:44:46 GMT
Source: Reuters

(Corrects number of U.S. troops who have died from "some 3,100" to "more than 3,200" in paragraph 7)

By Andrew Gray

TAMPA, Fla., March 16 (Reuters) - Adm. William Fallon took over on Friday as new U.S. commander for the region that includes the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and said the situation in Iraq was critical.

Fallon replaced Army Gen. John Abizaid at U.S. Central Command, which is responsible for the U.S. military in 27 countries.

"The situation in Iraq is critical and time is of the essence," Fallon told U.S. and allied soldiers at a ceremony in an aircraft hangar at the headquarters in Tampa, Florida.

He said U.S. and Iraqi forces were engaged in a security crackdown that began last month, and that the U.S. military and NATO allies also had launched a new operation to fight Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan.

"Despite these challenges, we have an awful lot going for us," Fallon said.

"We have vast capabilities in this nation of ours and, in concert with our allies, if we put our minds to it, there's very little that we can't accomplish."

More than 3,200 U.S. troops have died since U.S.-led forces invaded Iraq in March 2003.

Fallon is the first Navy officer to run Central Command, a headquarters that combines elements from all U.S. military services, since it was created in 1983. He was previously in charge of Pacific Command.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates praised Fallon as "one of the best strategic thinkers in uniform today" and said Abizaid, who is retiring after running Central Command since July 2003, had enjoyed "one of the more storied military careers in recent memory".

But Gates also said: "In all of these efforts, I am sure that General Abizaid would agree that not everything has gone as planned, as expected, or as hoped. This is the nature of war."
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Left-wing Israeli activists take part in a demonstration calling on Israel to accept an Arab initiative currently being revived at the summit of Arab leaders in Riyadh, outside Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's official residence in Jerusalem March 28, 2007. Arab League chief Amr Moussa on Wednesday pressed Israel to accept unchanged the 2002 Arab initiative. The Arab peace plan offers the Jewish state normal ties with all Arab countries if it fully withdraws from land it occupied in 1967, accepts a Palestinian state and agrees to a "just solution" for Palestinian refugees.