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Bush argues the case for staying
in Iraq
Washington -
Democrats and Republicans are applauding President Bush for
acknowledging mistakes in Iraq and taking responsibility, but critics
say he still has not given Americans a realistic plan that will lead
to the withdrawal of U.S. forces.
"I know that some of my decisions
have led to terrible loss — and not one of those decisions has been
taken lightly," Bush declared in a televised speech to the nation
Sunday, his first from the Oval Office since announcing the invasion
of Iraq in March 2003.
He held out the promise that when the
Iraqi military gains strength and self-government moves forward, "it
should require fewer American troops to accomplish our mission. I will
make decisions on troop levels based on the progress we see."
The language was not specific enough
for Bush's critics.
"While I appreciate the president's
increased candor, too much of the substance remains the same and the
American people have still not heard what benchmarks we must meet
along the way to know that progress is being made" and when the troops
"can begin to come home," said Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of
Nevada.
His House counterpart, Rep. Nancy
Pelosi (news, bio, voting record), D-Calif., said: "Tonight the
president acknowledged more of the mistakes he has made in Iraq, but
he still does not get it. Iraq did not present an imminent threat to
the security of the United States before he began his war of choice."
Bush said that despite setbacks, "Not
only can we win the war in Iraq — we are winning the war in Iraq."
There is a difference, he said,
between "honest critics who recognize what is wrong, and defeatists
who refuse to see that anything is right."
That drew a rebuttal from Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy (news, bio, voting record), D-Mass.
"It's wrong for him to silence his
critics by calling them defeatists," said Kennedy. "Every American —
including those that thought this war should never have been fought —
understands that we have no choice for own security but to win in
Iraq."
Bush should acknowledge, "as his own
generals do, that the Iraq war has emboldened the terrorists and
increased their ranks," Kennedy said.
Critics also said a change in
direction is essential.
Iraqis must be told the United States
will reconsider its presence unless the new constitution is revised to
give the minority Sunni Arab community a stake in running the country,
said Sen. Carl Levin (news, bio, voting record), D-Mich.
"They've got to share power, they've
got to share oil resources," said Levin, senior Democrat on the Senate
Armed Services Committee. There can be a significant withdrawal of
U.S. troops only if there are enough capably trained Iraqi soldiers by
the end of 2006, he said.
On NBC's "Meet the Press" earlier
Sunday, Levin said Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has "ducked the
question" of whether the United States would tell the Iraqis they need
to change their new constitution.
"The amendment process is there and
it ought to be used," said Rice, also appearing on NBC.
In his speech, Bush said it is
important "for every American to understand the consequences of
pulling out ... before our work is done. We would abandon our Iraqi
friends and signal to the world that America cannot be trusted to keep
its word."
"The president said we must not pull
out of Iraq `before our work is done,'" said Sen. Russ Feingold (news,
bio, voting record), D-Wis. "He needs to understand that our brave
servicemen and women won a resounding victory in the initial military
operation, and their task is now largely over."
Bush said some look at Iraq and
conclude that "the war is lost," but "not even the terrorists believe
it. We know from their own communications that they feel a tightening
noose — and fear the rise of a democratic Iraq."
Sen. John Warner (news, bio, voting
record), R-Va., Armed Services Committee chairman, said Bush's speech
"was a high-water mark in his acknowledgment that mistakes have been
made and that he has to accept his share of the blame.
"But he remains resolute, as he
should, in continuing our help to the Iraqi people so that they can
achieve a self-sufficient government and become a truly sovereign
nation," Warner added.
Bush's Oval Office address followed a
string of weekend attacks by insurgents in Iraq that pierced three
days of relative calm. It also topped off an 18-day span in which Bush
made five speeches conceding setbacks amid progress in Iraq.
"We have six more months to get this
right," Sen. Joseph Biden (news, bio, voting record), D-Del., said on
MSNBC, but added that "the president has to move."
To abandon Iraq now would be a
"serious, serious mistake," said Biden. "If we, in fact, lose in Iraq
— that is, if a Shia-style, Iranian-style government is set up — it
will be terrible for us for a long time." -- Associated Press
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