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Democrats say
will push for Iraq withdrawal
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—Democrats, who won control of the U.S. Congress, said on
Sunday they will push for a phased withdrawal of American troops from
Iraq to begin in four to six months, but the White House cautioned
against fixing timetables.
“First order of business is to change the direction of Iraq policy,”
said Sen. Carl Levin (news, bio, voting record), a Michigan Democrat who
is expected to be chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee in the
new Congress.
Democrats will press President George W. Bush’s administration to tell
the Iraqi government that U.S. presence was “not open-ended, and that,
as a matter of fact, we need to begin a phased redeployment of forces
from Iraq in four to six months,” Levin said on ABC’s “This Week”
program.
Bush has insisted that U.S. troops would not leave until Iraqis were
able to take over security for their country, and has repeatedly
rejected setting a timetable for withdrawal because, he says, that would
only embolden the insurgents.
The White House said, however, that Bush is open to new ideas. Bush will
meet on Monday with the bipartisan Iraq Study Group that is expected to
recommend alternative policies in its final report. A suicide bomber
killed 35 people at a police recruiting center in Iraq on Sunday in the
bloodiest attack in months against recruits.
More than 2,800 American troops have been killed in Iraq since the 2003
U.S.-led invasion and the unpopular war was a key factor in last week’s
elections in which Bush’s Republican Party lost majorities in the Senate
and the House of Representatives.
White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten said it was important that any
action be taken in a way to ensure that Iraq can succeed and have a
democratic government that can sustain and defend itself.
“It’s hard for me to see how that can be done on a fixed timetable,”
Bolten said on ABC’s “This Week” program. “But the president’s open to
fresh ideas here. Everybody’s reviewing the situation.”
Bush has asked Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the military Joint Chiefs of
Staff, to conduct a review at the Pentagon of Iraq strategy, and other
national security agencies to do similar reviews, Bolten said.
Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada said “we need to
redeploy,” but that the decision should be made by military officers in
Iraq.
He said on “Face The Nation” program on CBS that he would not insist on
a specific date for drawing down troops, but that a withdrawal should
start within the next few months.
The White House says Bush is not to receive final recommendations from
the Iraq Study Group — led by James Baker, a former secretary of state
with close ties to the Bush family — in the Monday meeting.
Bush chose a member of that panel, former CIA Director Robert Gates, to
replace Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, whose resignation was
announced the day after elections gave control of Congress to Democrats
for the first time since 1994.
Sen. Joseph Biden (news, bio, voting record), a Delaware Democrat who is
expected to head the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he was
inclined to support Gates, whose nomination requires Senate approval.
“I know some of his views on Iraq. I know he wasn’t of the Rumsfeld
school. And to put it very, very bluntly, as long as he’s not there,
Rumsfeld is there,” Biden said on ABC.
Biden called for an international conference on Iraq, that would include
Iran, Syria and Turkey. |