Peace North - Wisconsin


Home

Iraq MoratoriumI hereby make a commitment that on the Third Friday of each and every month, I will break my daily routine and take some action, by myself or with others, to end the War in Iraq.
Sign me up!  Information: (715) 635-6416 or botmrung@centurytel.net

Hayward, WI Vigil - Corner of Hwys 63 & 27 
Stand with us on July 18th :: 4-6 PM


Bush Suffers More Defections on Iraq Print E-mail
Written by Jim Lobe   
Wednesday, 27 June 2007
Article Index
Bush Suffers More Defections on Iraq
Nation at Risk
(Inter Press Service) WASHINGTON, DC -  In a potentially significant setback to President George W. Bush's efforts to sustain Republican support for his "surge" in Iraq, three key senators this week have called on the White House to revise U.S. strategy there before September.

The defections, which were set off by a major policy address Monday on the floor of the Senate by the ranking Republican on the chamber's Foreign Relations Committee, Richard Lugar, suggest that patience for Bush's approach among his own party is fast running out.

They also coincided with a new poll released this week by Newsweek magazine which found that public approval of Bush's handling of Iraq has reached an all-time low of 23 percent.

The same poll found that Bush's general approval ratings have also reached an all-time low of 26 percent, near the post-World War II record set by Richard Nixon shortly before his resignation in 1974.

The White House has argued that lawmakers should not push for any change in U.S. policy before at least September. That is when Gen. David Petraeus and the U.S. ambassador in Baghdad, Ryan Crocker, are scheduled to present an evaluation of the effectiveness of the "surge" – a counter-insurgency plan that since February has added 30,000 U.S. troops to the 135,000 already there in order to curb sectarian violence and encourage national reconciliation.

In recent weeks, both the Pentagon and the White House have appeared to retreat from that date, arguing that any assessment of the surge made in September was likely to be premature and thus suggesting that the current strategy be give more time.

Those suggestions may be precipitating what looks increasingly like a Republican revolt. Initiated by Lugar, it has been endorsed by Ohio Sen. George Voinovich and praised by Virginia Sen. John Warner, a key Republican leader on national security issues and former chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

"I hail what he did," Warner said Tuesday, adding that he expected a number of Republicans to endorse Lugar's position during the debate over the 2008 defense appropriations bill next month. His office indicated that he would likely offer a detailed amendment to the bill laying out a change of strategy. After the July 4 recess, he said, "You'll be hearing a number of statements from other [Republican] colleagues."

Despite long-held reservations about the administration's policy in Iraq, Lugar, who served as the highly respected chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee before Democrats swept last November's elections, has consistently voted with the administration against Democratic efforts to set a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. combat forces, as have Warner and Voinovich.

While, in his speech, he rejected the option of a "total withdrawal" of U.S. forces from Iraq, Lugar stressed that a "tactical drawdown," coupled with a much greater focus on regional diplomacy, including a credible effort to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict, was an urgent necessity in light of the rapidly fading public support for Washington's continued engagement in Iraq.



 
< Prev   Next >
War & Peace News



Antiwar.com

Bush: Force Not Ruled Out on North Korea or Iran

Feds Indict 2 Alleged Munitions Dealers Over Iran Arms

Lebanese Feast on ‘Buns and Guns’ in Hezbollah Fiefdom

Israel in Jerusalem Dilemma After Bulldozer Attack

Israel, Syria Agree to Extend Turkish-Sponsored Talks: Ankara

After Attack, Israeli Jews Fear for Security

Colombian Hostages Say Life Grew More Dire

Colombia Rescue Hinged on Rebel Disarray, Payback

Lesson Learned, Poles Get Tough Over US Missiles

UK Defense Computers Behind Schedule, Over Budget


IPS Inter Press Service - Iraq and Beyond

POLITICS-US: Vets Mull Wins and Losses in Benefits Fight

Q&A: What the Most Seen Photographs Say

IRAQ: Journalist Charges Censorship by U.S. Military in Fallujah

RIGHTS-US: Anti-Torture Campaign Wins Influential Backers

US/IRAQ: A Blueprint for Withdrawal

POLITICS-IRAQ: Fear of US-Sunni Ties Undercut Security Talks

IRAQ: Whoever Wins, They Lose

POPULATION: Iraq Still a Major Source of Refugees in 2007

POLITICS: US Concessions Rescue Floundering Iraq Security Deal

IRAQ: Home to Too Many Widows

AUSTRALIA-IRAQ: Troops Withdraw, Howard Comes Under Fire

IRAQ: The Love Stories Are Gone

MIGRATION: Int'l Community Failing Iraqi Refugees

POLITICS-US: Bush Pledges on Iraq Bases Pact Were a Ruse

BOOKS-IRAQ: The Fruit of a Poisonous Tree


FAIR Media Views

Zev Chafets (New York Times Magazine): Late-Period Limbaugh

Jeff Zeleny (New York Times): Campaign Flashpoint: Patriotism and Service

Kevin Drum (Political Animal): Chart of the Day

Paul Hogarth (BeyondChron): 'Flag City' Just Another Media Myth About Obama

Igor Volsky (Think Progress): McCain In 2003: 'I Absolutely DonÂ’t Believe' Military Service Alone Qualifies Somebody for President

Gwen Ifill (NewsHour): Candidates Fight to Disprove Smears, Set Record Straight to Voters

Sabrina Tavernise & Andrew E. Kramer (New York Times): Iraq to Open Oil Fields for 35 Foreign Companies; Initial No-Bid Contracts Delayed

Dahleen Glanton (Chicago Tribune): Coded Prejudice Is Cloaked Dagger

David Roberts (Grist): Per Hirsh Incentives

Alex Dobuzinskis (Reuters): Ben Affleck Trades Acting for TV Reporting in Congo

Community Login

Peace Pic of the Moment


Who's Online

Mambo Template Supplied by Netshine Software Limited