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Bush, Shiite leader to meet in
D.C.
Washington -
The Bush White House faces a pivotal week on Iraq with a
visit Monday by a prominent Shiite leader and the release later of
long-awaited policy recommendations by a special study commission.
These developments come amid an
atmosphere of rising expectations about a new U.S. policy in Iraq
and an acknowledgment by President Bush's national security adviser
that Bush accepts that a new approach is warranted.
National security adviser Stephen
Hadley said Sunday that while Bush recognizes something different
needs to be done, the president won't use the recommendations due
this week from the Iraq Study Group as political cover for bringing
troops home.
Meanwhile, Bush was ready to sit
down at the White House Monday with Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, the Shiite
leader of the largest bloc in Iraq's parliament.
"We have not failed in Iraq,"
Hadley said as he made the talk show rounds Sunday. "We will fail in
Iraq if we pull out our troops before we're in a position to help
the Iraqis succeed."
He added: "The president
understands that we need to have a way forward in Iraq that is more
successful."
But, with the leak of another
insider's secret memo, the second in a week, the administration
found itself on the defensive.
The latest, first reported in
Sunday's New York Times, showed that Donald H. Rumsfeld called for a
"major adjustment" in U.S. tactics on Nov. 6 — the day before an
election that cost Republicans the Congress and Rumsfeld his job as
defense secretary.
Hadley played down the memo as a
laundry list of ideas rather than a call for a new course of action.
He said that Bush — just before a
pivotal election — was not portraying a different sense of the war
to the public than his own defense secretary was giving him in
private.
The president "has said publicly
what Rumsfeld said, that things are not proceeding well enough or
fast enough in Iraq," Hadley said.
Democrats did not buy that.
"The Rumsfeld memo makes it quite
clear that one of the greatest concerns is the political fallout
from changing course here in the United States," said Sen. Joseph
Biden (news, bio, voting record), D-Del., the incoming chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "The bottom line is there is
no one, including the former secretary, who thought the policy the
president continues to pursue makes any sense."
Rep. John Murtha (news, bio, voting
record), D-Pa., said the Rumsfeld memo was an example of how the
administration has been "mischaracterizing and misstating this war."
He said the Iraq conflict had devolved into a civil war. "There's
two factions fighting for supremacy inside Iraq and our troops are
caught in between," Murtha said on NBC's "Today" show. As incoming
chairman of the House Defense Appropriations subcommittee, Murtha
said he would put pressure on the administration to redeploy U.S.
troops there.
Bush has nominated Robert Gates to
replace Rumsfeld. His confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed
Services Committee is on Tuesday.
As pressure builds for a new
strategy, the report from the Iraq Study Group increasingly is
viewed as perhaps clearing the way for a U.S. exit strategy in Iraq.
Hadley, though, said the review will be just one factor the White
House considers.
After a meeting last week in
Jordan, Bush expressed confidence that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki and his government can lead the country toward peace with
support from the United States.
Yet Hadley found himself defending
his own memo that called that very point into question.
Written on Nov. 8 but disclosed
just before Bush's meeting with the Iraqi leader, the memo described
al-Maliki as "either ignorant of what is going on, misrepresenting
his intentions or that his capabilities are not yet sufficient to
turn his good intentions into action."
Hadley said Sunday about the memo:
"I made an assessment, raised a number of questions, hard questions
that should have been raised. But if you look at that memo and if
you look at what the president said in the press conference after
the meeting with Prime Minister Maliki, it is clear that this
government shares our objective for Iraq and has the will and desire
to take responsibility."
Hadley appeared Sunday on ABC's
"This Week," NBC's "Meet the Press," and `Face the Nation" on CBS.
Biden was on "Fox News Sunday. -- The
Associated Press
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