House OKs Plan to Withdraw US Troops
WASHINGTON - Iraq has achieved only spotty military and political progress toward a democratic society, the Bush administration conceded Thursday, an unenthusiastic assessment followed quickly by a House vote to withdraw U.S. troops by spring.
The measure passed 223-201 in the Democratic-controlled
House despite a veto threat from President Bush, who has ruled out any change
in war policy before September.
"The security situation in Iraq remains complex and
extremely challenging," the administration report concluded. The economic
picture is uneven, it added, and the government has not yet enacted vital political
reconciliation legislation.
As many as 80 suicide bombers per month cross into the
country from Syria, said the interim assessment, which is to be followed by a
fuller accounting in September from Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. military
commander in the region.
"I believe we can succeed in Iraq, and I know we
must," Bush said at a White House news conference at which he stressed the
interim nature of the report.
Describing a document produced by his administration at
Congress' insistence, he said there was satisfactory progress by the Iraqi
government toward meeting eight of 18 so-called benchmarks, unsatisfactory
progress on eight more and mixed results on the others.
To his critics including an increasing number of
Republicans he said bluntly,
"I don't think Congress ought to be running the war. I think they ought to
be funding the troops."
Democrats saw it differently.
A few hours after Bush's remarks, Democratic leaders
engineered passage of legislation requiring the withdrawal of U.S. combat
troops to begin within 120 days, and to be completed by April 1, 2008. The
measure envisions a limited residual force to train Iraqis, protect U.S. assets
and fight al-Qaida and other terrorists.
The vote generally followed party lines: 219 Democrats
and four Republicans in favor, and 191 Republicans and 10 Democrats opposed.
"The report makes clear that not even the White
House can conclude there has been significant progress," said Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.
To Bush and others who seek more time for the
administration's policy to work, she said, "We have already waited too
long."
Republicans sided with Bush at least for now. The bill
"undermines Gen. Petraeus, undermines the mission he has to make America
and Iraq safe," said the House GOP leader, Rep. John Boehner of Ohio.
"What we have here is not leadership, it's negligence."
The 25-page administration report was issued in the fifth
year of a war that has claimed the lives of more than 3,600 U.S. troops and is
costing U.S. taxpayers an estimated $10 billion a month.
Bush announced last winter he was ordering thousands of
additional troops to the war zone, but the full complement has only arrived in
recent weeks. "The full surge in this respect has only just begun,"
the report said.
It warned of "tough fighting" during the summer
as U.S. and Iraqi forces "seek to seize the initiative from early gains
and shape conditions of longer-term stabilization."
The president sampled the report at his nationally
televised session with reporters.
"Iraqis have provided the three brigades they
promised for operations in and around Baghdad. And the Iraqi government is
spending nearly $7.3 billion from its own funds this year to train, equip and
modernize its forces," he said.
But in other areas, he added, they "have much more
work to do. For example, they've not done enough to prepare for local elections
or pass a law to share oil revenues."
The report was blunt at points and more opaque at others.
While Iraq has begun to show progress in providing
services, "citizens nationwide complain about government corruption and
the lack of essential services, such as electricity, fuel supply, sewer, water,
health and sanitation."
At another point, it added, "The prerequisites for a
successful militia disarmament program are not present."
In addition to citing a Syrian connection for terrorists,
it also said Iran has continued to foster instability in Iraq.
It cited measured progress on the economic front.
"Unemployment has eased slightly and inflation is currently abating,"
the report said. It omitted mention of a June 1 Pentagon report estimating an
annual inflation rate at 33 percent and the Iraqi government estimate of
joblessness at 17 percent.
In an evident jab at critics of Bush's war policies, the
report also said progress toward political reconciliation was hampered by
"increasing concern among Iraqi political leaders that the United States
may not have a long term-commitment to Iraq."
Despite rising pressure from Republicans in Congress for
a change in course, Bush was adamant.
"When we start drawing down our forces in Iraq, it
will (be) because our military commanders say the conditions on the ground are
right, not because pollsters say it'll be good politics," he said.
Before Thursday's House vote, GOP aides said they hoped
to suffer only a few party defections, but the administration faced a more
volatile situation in the Senate. There, three Republicans have already said
they intend to vote for a separate withdrawal measure, and several others have
signed on as supporters of a bipartisan bill to implement a series of changes
recommended last winter by the Iraqi Study Group.
Even so, it appears the president's allies have the
support to block a final Senate vote in a showdown expected next week.
If the report changed any minds in Congress, it was not
immediately apparent.
"It is time for the president to listen to the
American people and do what is necessary to protect this nation. That means
admitting his Iraq policy has failed, working with the Democrats and
Republicans in Congress on crafting a new way forward in Iraq and refocusing
our collective efforts on defeating Al-Qaida," said Majority Leader Harry
Reid, D-Nev.
But Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican
leader, said Congress has already decided it will be September before the
administration's strategy can be evaluated properly. "Certainly the young
soldiers and Marines risking their lives today on the streets of Baghdad and
Ramadi would agree and they
deserve our patience."
WASHINGTON (AP) Copyright 2007, The Associated Press. All
rights reserved.