WORLD / America
Senate committee repudiates Bush on Iraq
(AP)
Updated: 2007-01-25 08:39
WASHINGTON - In a calculated snub of President Bush, the
Democratic-controlled Senate Foreign Relations Committee dismissed plans
for a troop buildup in Iraq on Wednesday as "not in the national
interest" of the United States.
US Democratic party Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) (C) confers with fellow
Democratic party senators (L-R) Ben Cardin (D-MD) and Bob Casey (D-PA) at
the start of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee business meeting on
Iraq resolution, on Capitol Hill in Washington, January 24, 2007.
[Reuters]
"The president has made his decision," Vice President Dick Cheney fired
back, a response that made it clear the administration would go ahead
anyway. "We need to get the job done."
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The committee vote, 12-9 along party lines, capped hours of debate in
which Republicans and Democrats vented their frustration and anger - both
with the administration and their own past unwillingness to change the
course of a war that has claimed the lives of more than 3,000 US troops.
"There is no strategy. This is a pingpong game with American lives," said
Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska.
"This Congress was never meant to be a rubber stamp," added Sen. Barbara
Boxer, D-Calif., "Read the Constitution. The Congress has the power to
declare war. And on multiple occasions, we used our power to end
conflicts."
Hagel was the only one of 10 committee Republicans to support the
nonbinding measure. Several of the panel's 11 Democrats said they favored
stronger legislation to register their opposition to the war.
In the wake of midterm election losses, Bush announced two weeks that he
would order an additional 21,500 troops into the war zone. In Tuesday
night's State of the Union address, he implored skeptical lawmakers to
give the strategy a chance.
Bush got his answer in less than 24 hours, the timing dictated by
Democrats, and Sen. Joseph Biden. D-Del., the panel's chairman, said
tougher measures were likely to follow.
"Unless the president demonstrates very quickly that he is unlikely to
continue down the road he's on, this will be only the first step. ... I
will be introducing ... constitutionally legitimate, binding pieces of
legislation. We will bring them up," he said.
Taken together, the committee's vote and Cheney's response suggested the
Democrats and the White House were on a collision course - lawmakers
drafting ever-stronger measures to change policy in Iraq, and the
president exercising his prerogatives as commander in chief - and his
veto pen.
"We are moving forward," Cheney said in an interview with CNN in which he
was asked about the troop buildup. "The Congress has control over the
purse strings. They have the right, obviously, if they want, to cut off
funding. But in terms of this effort, the president has made his
decision."
The vice president added: "We've consulted extensively with them. We'll
continue to consult with the Congress. But the fact of the matter is, we
need to get the job done."
Inside the Senate committee, all Republicans but Hagel opposed the
measure, denying Democrats the strong bipartisan vote they had sought.
Biden, who has announced he intends to run for president in 2008, said
the legislation is "not an attempt to embarrass the president. ... It's
an attempt to save the president from making a significant mistake with
regard to our policy in Iraq."
Democrats intend to bring the measure to the Senate floor for a vote next
week, and Biden said he is willing, in the interim, to make changes in
the hopes of gaining additional Republican support.
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