IRAQ: The former US administrator in Iraq said yesterday that his biggest regret was not getting a grip on the country's dangerous security situation before the formal transfer of authority to Iraqis took place.
Speaking outside the White House, Mr Paul Bremer said he was very relieved to be back in America after quietly handing over sovereignty to a new Iraqi interim government on Monday.
"It's like having a rather large weight lifted off my shoulders," he said in an interview with ABC's Good Morning America show.
But Mr Bremer said he was sorry not to have brought more stability to Iraq, where insurgents launch daily attacks and the death toll is rising for US forces and Iraqis.
"The greatest regret has to be that we were not able to get the security situation under better control by the end of the occupation," said Mr Bremer.
According to a study released yesterday in Geneva, more than eight million small arms weapons - from pistols to machine guns - fell into private hands in Iraq after the ousting of Saddam Hussein, providing a boon for insurgents who have been fighting US-led troops.
In an interview with CBS, Mr Bremer said his hope was that now the Iraqis had "full responsibility" for their country, insurgents might lessen their attacks when they realized they were targeting the Iraqi people and not the occupiers.
Despite not being able to get a grip on security, Mr Bremer said he believed Iraq was a better place after 14 months of US occupation and the ousting of Saddam Hussein.
One day, he said, he hoped to return to Iraq and show his granddaughter around.
Still wearing his trademark combat boots and a dark business suit, Mr Bremer was optimistic that Iraq's new interim government would be successful.
He hailed Prime Minister Iyad Allawi as a "tough guy" with a very able cabinet.
"This is going to be a difficult period in the months ahead but I'm confident they're going to succeed," he added.
He welcomed the handover of Saddam to Iraq's legal authorities yesterday and said he would get the kind of justice denied his own people. Saddam is expected to be charged in an Iraqi court today.
"It symbolizes how much better this country is today than it was a year ago when Saddam and his tyrants still had their hands at the throats of the Iraqi people.
"They are going to be very pleased to see him stand trial," he told NBC's Today show.
Saddam is still in the physical custody of US forces.
Asked whether he feared when Saddam was finally handed over physically to the Iraqis, his supporters would try to overrun a prison and free him, Mr Bremer said: "The more likely scenario is that a bunch of people who want to kill him take him over and hack him to pieces.
"We will hold onto him until we are confident the Iraqis can handle him."