GOP Torpedoes Iraq Troop Pullout Plan
By DAVID ESPO
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Republicans torpedoed legislation
Wednesday to force the withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from Iraq,
bowing to President Bush's adamant refusal to consider any change
in war strategy before September.
The 52-47 vote fell far short of the 60 needed to advance the
legislation and marked the final act in an all-night session that
Democrats engineered to dramatize their opposition to the war.
``Time and the American people are ... on our side,'' said a
defiant Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, who has made ending
the war the Democrats' top goal since they took control of the
Senate in January. ``We will do everything in our power to change
course in Iraq,'' he said moments after the vote.
Equally unyielding on the other side, Arizona Sen. John McCain
said, ``As long as there is a prospect for not losing this war,
then we must not choose to lose it.''
``I do not know how I could choose any other course,'' said
McCain, a Republican presidential contender.
The Senate's action left no doubt that Bush's decision last
winter to deploy additional troops to Iraq will have at least two
more months to produce results. Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S.
general in Iraq and architect of the president's latest strategy,
is to deliver a report to Congress on Sept. 15.
Wednesday's vote unfolded as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
visited the Capitol for private meetings with lawmakers and the
nation's top military officer cautioned that the United States
faces decades of fighting in the larger global war on terror.
``We can vote to fight it in one place or another,'' said Gen.
Peter Pace, whose term as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is
nearing an end.
``But the bottom line is that as long as our enemy is sworn to
destroy our way of life, we are going to be in a war,'' said Pace,
addressing troops in Afghanistan.
Inside the Capitol, senators voted from their seats as they
settled the fate of the withdrawal measure, a procedure usually
reserved only for the most solemn of occasions.
But the outcome was no different from numerous other contested
votes this year on the war, yet another demonstration that
Democrats lack the votes to force a change in course without the
acquiescence of Senate Republicans - if not the White House.
Expressions of Republican discontent on Iraq have grown in
recent weeks, a trend reinforced by an administration report that
showed little progress by Iraqis toward political goals. Even so,
only four of the Senate's 49 Republicans, Olympia Snowe and Susan
Collins of Maine, Gordon Smith of Oregon and Chuck Hagel of
Nebraska, chose to side with Democrats on their demand for a final
vote.
One of them, Collins, said she opposed the legislation itself,
which she said offered an ``abrupt withdrawal date'' that could
have disastrous consequences.
The proposal, advanced by Democrats Carl Levin of Michigan and
Jack Reed of Rhode Island, would have required Bush to begin
pulling out the 158,000 U.S. troops stationed in Iraq within 120
days. The withdrawal would be completed by April 30, 2008, with the
exception of a residual force to fight terrorists, train Iraqis and
protect U.S. personnel and possessions.
Unlike a withdrawal bill that cleared the House last week, the
measure does not contemplate assigning Iraqi border security to
U.S. troops.
Democrats have provided no estimates on how many thousands, or
even tens of thousands, of troops would be required to fulfill
those missions.
Republicans raised numerous questions about the impact of the
withdrawal measure, but their common criticism was that Bush's
so-called troop surge deserved more time.
``We need to give Gen. Petraeus until September to do his work.
That's a commitment we made and signed into law,'' said Sen. Mitch
McConnell, the Republican leader, referring to legislation that
cleared Congress in May. ``We need to stand by that commitment.''
McConnell jabbed at the all-night session that Democrats had
choreographed, referring to ``all the gags and giggles and
gimmicks, the cold pizza and the empty cots.''
Democrats seemed content, having labored overtime to reassure
MoveOn.org and other anti-war constituents of their commitment, and
having placed Republicans in a position of having to choose between
public sentiment on the war and a president of their own party.
Republicans grumbled at that, and twice in recent days, Reid has
abruptly cut off GOP senators attempting to explain their actions.
Collins, who sponsors a less sweeping proposal, expressed dismay
that following the vote, the majority leader decided to cut off
debate on Iraq.
``We needed to have a chance to debate'' several bipartisan
measures to change the U.S. mission in Iraq, she said.
But Democratic strategists said that wasn't part of their
agenda, and that Reid wanted to deny Republicans the chance to
demonstrate independence from Bush unless they were willing to
support the withdrawal measure.
The all-night session had its moments - Democrats decamping at
dusk to attend a candlelight rally near the Capitol, for example, a
senator or two catching a middle-of-the-night snooze in a room
equipped with cots just off the Senate floor, meaningless
procedural votes that obliged bleary-eyed lawmakers to appear at
midnight and again at 5 a.m.
Not even presidential contenders were immune from indignity.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York wound up with a
dead-of-night turn to speak, not long after 4 a.m. Sen. Barack
Obama of Illinois, her chief campaign rival, thought he had landed
a slot in the 6 a.m. hour, rich in possibility for morning
television coverage. That plan evaporated in a Senate scheduling
crunch, though, and his remarks were limited to mere seconds, hours
later.
Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., delivered his entire speech after the
vote.
Among the presidential hopefuls, only McCain referred to their
common goal, the White House. Casting himself as willing to defy
public opinion on the war, he said, ``The public's judgment of me I
will know soon enough. I accept it, as I must.''
07/18/07 17:26
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