Bush: be prepared for more bloodshed in Iraq
Friday, May 25, 2007
By Rupert Cornwell
As Congress prepared for a crucial war-funding vote, President George Bush
warned that Americans should prepare for a bloody summer of heavy fighting
and more loss of life in Iraq in the run-up to September, the month that is
now set to be a watershed for US policy in the country.
"August could be tough," the President conceded at a White House press
conference in the face of some of the toughest questioning yet of his war
policy - especially of whether the date for the now critical report promised
by his top commander in Iraq had in fact handed insurgents precisely the
sort of deadline that Mr Bush has all along strenuously resisted.
Attempting to explain the continuing level of violence in Iraq, Mr Bush
pointed out that the "surge" of 25,000 new combat troops would not be
completed until next month, and that General David Petraeus was to make a
first judgement on the success of the operation only in September. But if
nothing has visibly changed on the ground, then the clamour for a US troop
withdrawal could become deafening.
As it is, the latest $100bn (£50bn) funding bill for Iraq and Afghanistan
(which also will run out at the end of September) has been stripped of the
timeline for withdrawal which caused Mr Bush to veto a previous measure
earlier this month. The new one instead contains "benchmarks" for political
action by the Iraqis. These, Mr Bush said, reflected "a consensus that the
Iraqi government needs to show real progress in return for America's
continued support and sacrifice".
On Capitol Hill however, a deal is causing not so much consensus as
heartache in both parties. With varying degrees of unease, Republicans have
again rallied behind Mr Bush. This removes any possibility of a veto
over-ride by Congress, but exposes them to the wrath of an electorate which
has turned against the war.
Democratic rifts are even deeper. Many liberal congressmen and senators said
they would vote against the bill which, they insist, runs counter to the
express will of the voters who handed the party back control of both
chambers in November's mid-term elections. The leading anti-war group,
Moveon.org, with 3.2 million members, has warned it might back primary
election rivals to Democrats who vote in favour. But the party leadership
has calculated that despite the risk that half of the House Democrats will
oppose the measure, an even greater danger would be exposure to Republican
charges that the party did not care about the troops who risked risking
their lives daily on the ground in Iraq. Even so, Democratic leaders face
the embarrassment of relying on Republican votes to get the bill through.
The tensions have spilt over into the Presidential campaign. John Edwards,
the Democrats' vice-presidential candidate in 2004 who this time is waging a
populist campaign for the White House, called the latest bill a
"capitulation" to Mr Bush. The two 2008 front-runners, senators Barack Obama
and Hillary Clinton, were last night maintaining an uncomfortable silence
about their voting intentions.
At his press conference, Mr Bush himself yielded not one inch of ground to
his critics - even when a reporter directly challenged his credibility as
commander-in-chief in a four-year war that has taken the lives of more than
3,400 US servicemen, and tens - perhaps hundreds - of thousands of Iraqi
civilians. Instead he reiterated his familiar arguments: that Iraq was
better off without Saddam; that America must stay on the offensive; and that
it was better to take on al-Qa'ida in Iraq than on US soil.
"These people attacked us before we went into Iraq," said Mr Bush. A US
withdrawal would merely embolden al-Qa'ida in its efforts to restore the
caliphate, "if they could say they drove great, soft America out of the
region". As for the efforts of his Democratic opponents to have a say in the
execution of war policy, "I'd trust David Petraeus to make judgements a lot
better than people in Congress," Mr Bush declared.