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We can’t jeopardize gains in Iraq: Bush
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—Five years after launching the invasion of Iraq, President
Bush strongly signaled Wednesday that he won’t order troop withdrawals
beyond those already planned because he refuses to “jeopardize the
hard-fought gains” of the past year.
As anti-war activists demonstrated around downtown Washington, the
president spoke at the Pentagon to mark the anniversary of a war that
has cost nearly 4,000 U.S. lives and roughly $500 billion. The
president’s address was part of a series of events the White House
planned around the anniversary and next month’s report from the top U.S.
figures in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker. That
report will be the basis for Bush’s first troop-level decision in seven
months.
“The battle in Iraq has been longer and harder and more costly than we
anticipated,” Bush said. But, he added, before an audience of Pentagon
brass, soldiers and diplomats: “The battle in Iraq is noble, it is
necessary, and it is just. And with your courage, the battle in Iraq
will end in victory.” Democrats took issue with Bush’s stay-the-course
suggestion.
“With the war in Iraq entering its sixth year, Americans are rightly
concerned about how much longer our nation must continue to sacrifice
our security for the sake of an Iraqi government that is unwilling or
unable to secure its own future,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.
“Democrats will continue to push for an end to the war in Iraq and
increased oversight of that war.”
Bush repeatedly and directly linked the fight there to the global battle
against the al Qaida terror network. And he made some of his most
expansive claims of success. He said the increase of 30,000 troops that
he ordered to Iraq last year has turned “the situation in Iraq around.”
He also said that “Iraq has become the place where Arabs joined with
Americans to drive al Qaida out.”
“The surge ... has opened the door to a major strategic victory in the
broader war on terror,” the president said. “We are witnessing the first
large-scale Arab uprising against Osama bin Laden, his grim ideology,
and his terror network. And the significance of this development cannot
be overstated.”
Bush appeared to be referring to recent cooperation by local Iraqis with
the U.S. military against the group known as al-Qaida in Iraq, a mostly
homegrown, though foreign-led, Sunni-based insurgency. Experts question
how closely — or even whether — the group is connected to the
international al-Qaida network. As for bin Laden, he is rarely heard
from and is believed to be hiding in Pakistan.
The U.S. has about 158,000 troops in Iraq. That number is expected to
drop to 140,000 by summer in drawdowns meant to erase all but about
8,000 troops from last year’s increase. Faster and larger withdrawals
could unravel recent progress, said Bush. “Having come so far and
achieved so much, we are not going to let this happen,” he said.
It is widely believed that he will endorse a recommendation from
Petraeus next month for no additional troop reductions, beyond those
already scheduled, until at least September. This pause in drawdowns
would be designed to assess the impact of this round before allowing
more.
The surge was meant to tamp down sectarian violence in Iraq so that the
country’s leaders would have time to advance legislation considered key
to reconciliation between rival Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish communities.
But the gains on the battlefield have not been matched by dramatic
political progress, and violence again may be increasing.
Bush, who has successfully defied efforts by the Democratic-led Congress
to force larger troop withdrawals, criticized those who “still call for
retreat” in the face of what he called undeniable successes.
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