WASHINGTON (ISN) - The first head has rolled under the affects of
the 2006 elections. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld stepped
down as defense secretary on Wednesday, one day after midterm
elections in which opposition to the war in Iraq contributed to
heavy Republican losses.
President Bush said he would nominate Robert Gates, a former CIA
director, to replace Rumsfeld at the Pentagon.
Asked whether his announcement signaled a new direction in the
war that has claimed the lives of more than 2,800 U.S. troops, Bush
said, "Well, there's certainly going to be new leadership at the
Pentagon."
Bush lavished praise on Rumsfeld, who has spent six stormy years
at his post. The president disclosed he met with Gates last Sunday,
two days before the elections in which Democrats swept to control of
the House and possibly the Senate.
Last week, as he campaigned to save the Republican majority, Bush
declared that Rumsfeld would remain at the Pentagon through the end
of his term.
Rumsfeld, 74, was in his second tour of duty as defense chief. He
first held the job a generation ago, when he was appointed by
President Ford.
Whatever confidence Bush retained in Rumsfeld, the Cabinet
officer's support in Congress had eroded significantly. Rep. Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif., the House speaker-in-waiting, said at her first
postelection news conference that Bush should replace the top
civilian leadership at the Pentagon.
And Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, who had intervened in the
past to shore up Rumsfeld, issued a statement saying, "Washington
must now work together in a bipartisan way - Republicans and
Democrats - to outline the path to success in Iraq."
The Pentagon offered no date for Rumsfeld's departure.
Gates, 63, has served as the president of Texas A&M University
since August 2002, and as the university's interim dean of the
George Bush School of Government and Public Service from 1999 to
2001.
The school is home to the presidential library of Bush's father.
Gates is a close friend of the Bush family, and particularly the
first President Bush.
He served as deputy national security adviser from 1989 to 1991
and then as CIA director during the first Iraq war, from 1991 until
1993.
Gates joined the CIA in 1966 and is the only agency employee to
rise from an entry level job to the 7th floor director's office. He
served in the intelligence community for more than a quarter century,
under six presidents.
Bush has considered Gates for jobs before, including in 2005 when
he was searching for a candidate to be the nation's first national
intelligence director.
His nomination must be confirmed by the Senate.
Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., who is expected to chair the House Armed
Services Committee next year, said Rumsfeld's resignation "presents
an important opportunity for our country to begin a new policy
direction in Iraq and in the war on terrorism."
He encouraged the Bush administration to take advantage of the
fresh start.