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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: goldworldnet who wrote (563434)4/12/2004 1:01:05 PM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Read Replies (8) | Respond to of 769667
 
And John Kerry did not criticize the war while in uniform.



To: goldworldnet who wrote (563434)4/12/2004 1:26:17 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769667
 
Questions Build for U.S. as Iraq Turmoil Grows
Bush concedes 'it's hard to tell' when strife will end. Bremer isn't sure who will take power.

By Edwin Chen and Ronald Brownstein, Times Staff Writers

CRAWFORD, Texas — President Bush acknowledged Sunday that it had been a "tough week" in Iraq as he spent Easter at an Army base that lost at least nine soldiers in recent attacks.

He also conceded that "it's hard to tell" whether the violence would soon ebb.

About 60 Americans and hundreds of Iraqis died last week as U.S.-led coalition troops fought Sunni Muslim forces in Fallouja and militias loyal to Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada Sadr in Baghdad and across southern Iraq. In addition, several foreigners have been taken hostage.

In a brief news conference at Ft. Hood, Texas, Bush sidestepped a question about whether more U.S. troops were needed to quell the violence and described the attackers as "a few people trying to stop progress toward democracy."

"Our troops are taking care of business," he said. "Their job is to make Iraq more secure so that a peaceful Iraq can emerge."

But the administration faced sharp questions Sunday over its planned June 30 transfer of sovereignty, and U.S. civilian administrator L. Paul Bremer III acknowledged that it was unclear who exactly would be in control.

Some Republican senators called for an increase in the number of U.S. forces in Iraq, an action the administration has resisted.


In appearances on several television news shows, Bremer reiterated his intention to uphold Bush's deadline for returning sovereignty to an Iraqi government.

But when asked on NBC's "Meet the Press" how the government would be structured and who would hold power, Bremer replied: "That's a good question…. It's an important part of the ongoing crisis we have here now."

On ABC's "This Week," Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) urged Bush to "reevaluate" the deadline and echoed the call from Sen. John F. Kerry, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, to transfer authority for designing a new Iraqi government from the U.S. to the U.N.

"I think that's … an option that we have to pursue," said Collins, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. "It would perhaps encourage other countries to finally commit some security forces…. It's not ideal, but it seems to me it's really the only option that we have."

And, she said, "to transfer power when we're not even sure to whom we would be transferring power would be a mistake … and might well result in Iraq erupting into civil war."


But Bush's commitment to meeting the June 30 target date received an important vote of confidence from Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.), the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who had been questioning the plan. "Credibility is at stake," Lugar said on "Fox News Sunday." "Now, that means you devote whatever you need to it and make sure it gets done."

To meet the deadline, he said, the administration would probably need to send more American forces to Iraq. "It's clear that we're stretched," Lugar said, "and the Iraqi security [forces] are not prepared yet to fight and to turn back insurgents."


But Army Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, said on "Meet the Press" that no new troops were needed. He said the current number — 129,000 — was adequate "with the management of the redeployment." Delaying some troops' return home as others arrive temporarily increases the force.

During his news conference, Bush noted that he had spoken twice recently with Army Gen. John Abizaid, head of Central Command. "He knows full well that, when he speaks to me, that if he needs additional manpower he can ask for it," Bush said.

Bush, several members of his family and national security advisor Condoleezza Rice attended Easter services at the Ft. Hood chapel, where he said he prayed "on bended knee" for U.S. and coalition troops as well as "innocent Iraqis who suffer at the hands of some of these senseless killings by people who are trying to shake our will."

He then met in the base hospital with 11 soldiers who were injured this month and awarded Purple Hearts to 10 of them. As recently as Friday, two dozen Ft. Hood soldiers arrived at the base for treatment.

Several national polls released late last week showed that the intensifying violence had shaken American confidence about the mission in Iraq. Polls for both Newsweek and CNN/Time found that Bush's approval rating on Iraq had fallen to 44%.

In the CNN/Time survey, 46% of respondents said the U.S. should begin reducing its troop commitment.
In the Newsweek poll, nearly two-thirds said they were either very or somewhat concerned that Iraq "will become another Vietnam in which the U.S. does not accomplish its goals despite many years of military involvement."

Perhaps reflecting that anxiety, half of those surveyed by Newsweek said they wanted the U.S. to stick to the schedule of returning authority to an Iraqi government by the end of June, while only about one-third wanted to extend the deadline.

Bremer expressed confidence that the deadline could be met but acknowledged that he was relying heavily on U.N. special envoy Lakhdar Brahimi to resolve many issues. Brahimi has been functioning as a negotiator between the Coalition Provisional Authority and Iraqis.

On "This Week," Bremer dodged a question about one of the most sensitive issues in the negotiations: how much authority a new Iraqi government will exercise over U.S.-led troops that remain in the country to provide security.


Asked if the new Iraqi government would have a veto over U.S. military operations, Bremer said, "Let's see when we get there what those arrangements are." White House officials have said privately that no agreement has yet been reached on the degree of control an Iraqi government would exert over coalition forces.

The issue was thrown into starker relief Sunday in a Washington Post article revealing that a battalion of the new Iraqi army had refused to go into battle behind U.S. Marines in Fallouja last week. According to the Post, the Iraqi soldiers told U.S. officers: "We did not sign up to fight Iraqis."

Sanchez acknowledged that the incident "did … uncover some significant challenges in some of the Iraqi security force structures that have been put into place over the course of the last six months."



To: goldworldnet who wrote (563434)4/12/2004 1:27:31 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
Bush's treatment of VETERANS IS HIS WAY OF DISGRACING THE UNIFORM!
Not to even MENTION HIS HORRIBLE SERVICE RECORD THAT HE IS STILL TRYING TO MASSAGE...where IS that WINGMAN ANYWAY?
Kerry has only sought to END THE WAR IN VIETNAM!...you still saying that war was GOOD>????
Then you are really living a lie in the past
CC



To: goldworldnet who wrote (563434)4/12/2004 1:34:09 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769667
 
Outbreak of Iraqi Violence Pressures Allies
Leaders who have contributed troops are mostly hanging tough while criticism comes from media, opposition parties and the public.



Related Stories
Questions Build for U.S. as Iraq Turmoil Grows
April 12, 2004
As Sun Rises on Easter, Marines Put Down Weapons for Prayer
April 12, 2004
By John Daniszewski, Times Staff Writer

LONDON — This month's upsurge in violence in Iraq is putting intense pressure on America's chief allies in the war, with political leaders who have sided with the Bush administration facing stinging criticism from opposition parties, newspapers and street demonstrators.

But for the most part, leaders of allied countries are hanging tough and talking back to their detractors, arguing that there is nothing to be gained and much to lose from retreating at such a crucial time.

Iraq "is a battle we have to fight, a struggle we have to win," British Prime Minister Tony Blair declared Sunday in defense of his decision to send forces to Iraq.

"Were we to fail, which we will not, it is more than 'the power of America' that would be defeated," Blair wrote in the Observer newspaper Sunday. "The hope of freedom and religious tolerance in Iraq would be snuffed out. Dictators would rejoice; fanatics and terrorists would be triumphant. Every nascent strand of moderate Arab opinion … would be set back in bitter disappointment."

Blair's commentary came against the backdrop of increasingly gloomy assessments of the state of the war in Iraq, where coalition forces find themselves in a two-front battle involving radical elements of both Sunni and Shiite branches of Islam.

The coalition death toll in the first 11 days of April shot up to about 60, including one Ukrainian and one Salvadoran. Since the war began nearly 13 months ago, the alliance has lost more than 100 non-American soldiers, 59 of them British, according to unofficial estimates.

Abductions of foreigners in Iraq have also surged, raising the stakes for coalition partners.


About 35 countries have offered some type of military assistance in Iraq, but for most the contribution is largely symbolic. Only a handful of nations have been willing to send as many as 1,000 soldiers; Britain has committed 11,000. By contrast, the U.S. aims to keep 120,000 troops in place, and the number is currently closer to 130,000 as new troops rotate in.

Even the contributions of staunch allies appear to be at risk as the military situation deteriorates. British Foreign Minister Jack Straw candidly told a BBC radio audience last week that "the lid of the pressure cooker has come off." Blair's Labor Party has always been divided about the war, with former Labor ministers Robin Cook and Clare Short now among the government's sharpest critics.

"There is a growing feeling here of 'What the hell are we doing in there and how are we going to get out?' "
British member of parliament Eric Illsley, a Labor backbencher, told the Sunday Telegraph.

The chief editor of Poland's mass-circulation Fakt newspaper sounded a similar note, saying it looked as if Poland's 2,500 troops in Iraq were being used to quell popular dissent rather than liberate the country.

In Japan, Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi faced his third straight day of antiwar demonstrations Sunday as the country waited to hear whether three Japanese civilians taken hostage last week would be released unharmed. Japan has about 550 soldiers in Iraq performing humanitarian work.

Yet Koizumi insisted that Japan would not submit to the kidnappers' ultimatum: Withdraw from Iraq or watch as the hostages are executed.

Until the hostages were taken, Japanese public support for Koizumi's deployment of troops, the first such mission since World War II, was strong. Now, Japan's traditional anti-military sentiment appears to have been revived, as seen in the daily protests outside Koizumi's residence as well as in stepped-up demands by the small opposition Socialist Party to pull Japanese troops from Iraq.

Like Blair and Koizumi, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi strongly reaffirmed Italy's participation in the U.S.-led coalition over the weekend, paying a surprise visit Saturday to the nearly 3,000 Italian troops stationed in Nasiriya. He said it was "unthinkable" to abandon Iraq now. Doing so would cave in to terrorists, he said.

"It wouldn't stop the violence, and it would leave the Iraqi people in a bloody civil war," Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said.

Nevertheless, support for the mission in Iraq has eroded in Italy. Most Italians assumed their soldiers were working as part of a peacekeeping, humanitarian mission and were shocked when 19 Italians were killed in a suicide bombing last fall.

So far, the most significant threat of withdrawal from the coalition comes from Spain, which has had 1,300 troops in Iraq. The new government due to assume power this week intends to pull out Spanish troops unless the U.N. steps in before June 30, the target date for transferring sovereignty to the Iraqi people. (Honduras, following Spain's announcement, indicated that it too planned to withdraw its 370 troops.)

Spain's incoming prime minister, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, scored a surprise election victory last month after campaigning on a promise to bring Spanish troops home. The election was held three days after a string of bombings blamed on Islamic militants ripped through four commuter trains in Madrid, killing nearly 200 people.

Voters blamed the sitting government of Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, a fervent supporter of the Bush administration's war in Iraq, for placing their country in harm's way and for attempting to deflect blame for the bombing. Spanish public opinion had opposed the war from the start, and the violence of the last week has only deepened that feeling.


Poland, a loyal American friend in the "new Europe," remains on board, but hints are that its participation is not as firm as it once was. In a recent interview, Prime Minister Leszek Miller was quoted as saying he expects there to be more and more public and political pressure to pull out of Iraq.

"A country taking part in a coalition cannot say, 'We are packing up and going,' " he said. But he added that the 2,500 Polish soldiers in Iraq represented "the maximum of our possibilities."

Rzeczpospolita, one of the nation's most respected newspapers aimed at the country's governing and political elites, insisted that the war was necessary. "Surrender in the face of terror means only one thing — more terror," the paper said.

But Grzegorz Jankowski, the editor of Fakt, took an opposite view. "Poles went to Iraq as peace forces, and not as a penal expedition," he said. "It is the Americans who are responsible for what is happening there now…. Fighting an Iraqi uprising will be their war — exclusively theirs."

In El Salvador, Salvadorans were shaken by the loss of one of their soldiers, 19-year-old Natividad Mendez, whose death in an April 4 ambush in Najaf was the first among the 1,000 Central American troops in Iraq. President Francisco Flores insisted that it would not weaken his "firm determination to maintain the army's presence in rebuilding and reestablishing peace and democracy in Iraq." But legislators of the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, which controls the largest minority in the Salvadoran Congress, said they planned to join other opposition parties to try to force a return of the soldiers, according to newspaper reports.

Extensive coverage of Mendez's death prompted letters from newspaper readers on both sides. Some have called the U.S.-led mission in Iraq an illegal invasion. Others argued that El Salvador must back its powerful ally because millions of Salvadoran immigrants work in the United States.

Times staff writers Doyle McManus in Tokyo, Tracy Wilkinson in Rome and Richard Boudreaux in Mexico City and Ela Kasprzycka of The Times' Warsaw Bureau contributed to this report.