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Visiting Iraq, Cheney defends extended stay for US troops

Vice President Dick Cheney attended a medal ceremony and rally yesterday with US troops at Camp Speicher in Iraq. Today, Cheney was to visit the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis, steaming in the gulf. He will also go to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Jordan. (Gerald Herbert/Associated Press)

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates -- Vice President Dick Cheney yesterday told US troops in Iraq that he knows they're suffering hardships from extended deployments but the longer stays are "vital to the mission."

His words were greeted with restrained applause at a rally on a US military base near Saddam Hussein's former hometown of Tikrit. On his second day in Iraq, Cheney also held classified meetings with US military leaders and emerged repeating the words of the top US commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, that "we can expect more violence" ahead.

From Iraq, Cheney flew to this Persian Gulf nation, the second stop on a trip that also will include visits to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Jordan. The purpose of his trip is to persuade Arab allies in the region to do more to help stabilize Iraq and promote ethnic reconciliation there.

Today, Cheney was to visit the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis, steaming in the gulf not far from here.

A couple thousand soldiers, clad in camouflage and with rifles on their shoulders, greeted the vice president at a mess hall at Camp Speicher, the desert post near Tikrit.

Specialist Eric Emo, 23, of Sedalia, Mo., whose Army unit is based in Fort Riley, Kan., said most of his fellow soldiers are unhappy about the deployment extensions from the current 12 months to 15 months, but understand the need for it.

In terms of hostile activity, he said, "conditions around here have gotten a lot worse."

He said there has been a particularly sharp increase in the number of roadside bombs.

One of the last warm-up acts before Cheney's appearance was a top 10 list of reasons to love Iraq. The number one reason was: "Where else can you get a 15-month vacation and call it the luxury extension plan?"

Officials said the three-month extension would affect nearly everyone on the base, where 10,000 to 12,000 US troops are stationed.

Cheney took on the issue in his speech moments later.

"Many of you have had your deployments extended, and that puts an unexpected hardship on you and your families," he said. "I want you to know the extension is vital to the mission. The Army and the country appreciate the extra burden that you carry."

Amid rising opposition in Washington to President Bush's military buildup, Cheney said, terrorists have made Iraq the place they want to fight, and "we will stay on the offensive. We will not sit back and wait to be hit again."

Major General Benjamin R. Mixon, commander of coalition forces in northern Iraq, said morale generally remains good "in terms of staying focused on the mission. They understand perfectly the reason the mission's been extended."

He said the blanket three-month extensions helped take the guesswork out of the policy.

"They want to know the exact day they're going back. That gives them something to focus on," he said.

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