Press briefing from the Prime Minister’s Official Spokesman on: Cabinet-Iraq.
Cabinet-Iraq
Asked if the issue of 90 day detention for terror suspects came up at Cabinet, the PMOS said no. At Cabinet Hilary Benn had updated his Cabinet colleagues on the Earthquake in Asia, and the brilliant work by staff from various departments in response to it. As the Prime Minister announced yesterday we would give £10million to the disaster appeal which, in addition to the £2million already contributed brought the total UK donation to £12million.
Jack Straw updated colleagues on Iraq, given that the vote on the constitution was this weekend. He said whilst no one was down-playing the difficulties on the security side, the political strategy was on track with the referendum this weekend and then the December elections. He said that was in spite of the attempts by the insurgency trying to stop a UN endorsed democratic process. The aim of the insurgency articulated in the letter from Al-Zawahiri to Al-Zarqawi recently published in the United States underlined what the Foreign Secretary had been saying. Asked about reports that the Foreign Secrteary had said it might take 10 years for democracy to take hold in Iraq, the PMOS said the Foreign Secretary had not said that. What he had said was that it would take time to make the transition from a failed state to a successful democracy. The comparison he had made in Cabinet was with post-war Germany where it actually took 4 years before national elections were held, whereas in Iraq it would take place in 2 years. So in terms of strategy, despite all the difficulties, which nobody was down-playing, we were very much on track.
Asked what the Prime Minister thought about the prospect that the insurgency in Iraq could continue for a very long time, the PMOS said that in terms of the letter from Al-Zawahiri to Al-Zarqawi, it showed us what the Al-Qaeda strategy was. That strategy was to defeat democracy because democracy was what they feared the most and advocating a permanent revolution. That was their goal and our response to that goal was to try and establish democracy. As the Foreign Secretary said at Cabinet, that strategy in Iraq, despite the insurgency, was on track. If you looked at the level of registration in Iraq for the Referendum and the December elections, the number of voters was rising compared to January. The people were engaged in the democratic process.

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