Rice aims to calm Congress' fears on Iraq (AP) Updated: 2005-10-19 22:10
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is
trying to reassure jittery Congress members who want specifics about the United
States' path to success in Iraq.
Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice looks on during a joint news conference with Russia's Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov after their meeting in Moscow, Saturday, Oct. 15, 2005.
Rice faces a jittery Congress seeking specifics about the United States' path to
success in Iraq in her first Capitol Hill appearance in eight months.
[AP]
Republicans and Democrats alike are raising
questions about the Bush administration's diplomatic and military plans in Iraq
amid a rising U.S. death toll, soaring costs and slumping public support for the
war.
"The president and Congress must be clear with the American people about the
stakes involved and the difficulties yet to come," Sen. Richard Lugar (news,
bio, voting record), R-Ind., the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, said in remarks prepared for delivery Wednesday, when Rice was making
her first Capitol Hill appearance in eight months.
"Even if withdrawal timelines are deemed unwise because they might provide a
strategic advantage to the insurgency, the American people need to more fully
understand the basis upon which our troops are likely to come home," Lugar said.
By State Department design, Rice was testifying before Lugar's committee just
days after Iraq apparently approved its first constitution since a U.S.-led
coalition ousted Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003. Her appearance also
coincided with the start of Saddam's trial in Baghdad for a massacre of 150 of
his fellow Iraqis.
With President Bush's poll numbers dragged down by public discomfort over
Iraq, Rice was seeking to reassure lawmakers — who are feeling the heat from
their war-weary constituents — that U.S. policies toward Iraq are sound.
But committee members from both political parties were expected to press Rice
on options for improving security, advancing the political process and
strengthening the economy in Iraq.
Saturday's vote was a political milestone on Iraq's path to forming a
legitimate democratic government. Efforts by skeptical Sunni Arabs to defeat the
charter appear to have failed, but the Bush administration has embraced their
unexpectedly large turnout at the polls as a sign democracy is taking root.
Lugar called the vote a welcome development, while noting, "The larger hope
of reaching a political settlement between all the major ethnic groups has not
been realized."
Urging caution, he added, "We cannot assume that the establishment of
democratic institutions in Iraq in the short term will yield corresponding
diminishment in the insurgency."
The Bush administration contends that progress on political and military
fronts is linked. It believes that as Iraqis take steps to establish a new
government, minority Sunnis will gain confidence in the democracy and quell the
insurgency.
The next step is in December, when Iraqis elect a new parliament and a new
government — the first permanent, constitutional government since Saddam's
regime ended.
When Iraqis assume responsibility for both running and securing their own
country, the administration hopes the 150,000 U.S. troops in Iraq will be able
to start returning home. But the White House has refused to put a timetable on
possible withdrawal.
That's frustrated Democrats, who for the better part of the year have been
calling for a pullout plan. In recent months, Republicans also have started to
voice concerns that the administration's exit strategy is murky.
Rice's appearance, her third before the committee since the president
nominated his former national security adviser to lead the State Department,
follows her diplomatic missions last week to Central Asia, Afghanistan,
Pakistan, France, Russia and Britain. Rice discussed with European allies U.S.
concerns about Iran's disputed nuclear weapons program and Syria's alleged
continued involvement in Lebanese politics.
In recent weeks, the United States has stepped up its accusations that Iran
and Syria are interfering in neighboring Iraq.
U.S. Ambassador James Jeffrey, a senior adviser to Rice on Iraq, said Tuesday
that Iran and Syria "are not being helpful in terms of controlling borders and
political processes."
"It is very important for Iraq to have normal relations with all of its
neighbors, including Syria and Iran, and it is very important for those
neighbors to behave," Jeffrey added.
Wednesday's was the 30th hearing the committee has held on Iraq since January
2003. Lawmakers have been gearing up for the hearing since summer, when the
panel sought the opinions of top foreign policy scholars on ways to improve U.S.
policy in Iraq.
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