CRAWFORD, Texas - US President George W. Bush went to his ranch to
rethink US involvement in Iraq as his spokesman hailed a Baghdad court's
decision upholding the death sentence for former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
US President George W. Bush and first lady Laura Bush prepare
to depart Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington for a week at their
Central Texas ranch in Crawford December 26, 2006. [Reuters]
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Saddam, who was deposed by the
US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, is to be hanged within 30 days.
"Today marks an important milestone in the Iraqi people's efforts to replace
the rule of a tyrant with the rule of law," deputy White House press secretary
Scott Stanzel told reporters on Tuesaday aboard Air Force One to Texas, where
Bush was to meet this week with his national security team.
Iraq's highest appeals court on Tuesday upheld the November 5 sentence
against Saddam for ordering the killing of 148 Shiites in Dujail in 1982,
following an attempt on his life. Chief Judge Aref Shahin said the sentence must
be implemented within 30 days, and could be carried out as early as Wednesday.
"Saddam Hussein has received due process and legal rights that he denied the
Iraqi people for so long, so this is an important day for the Iraqi people,"
Stanzel said.
The 82nd Airborne Division's 2nd Brigade, which would include as many as
3,300 soldiers, has been ordered to go to Kuwait shortly after the new year,
senior defense officials said Tuesday. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has
approved the deployment, which had been reported earlier this month, said
officials who requested anonymity because the announcement had not yet been made
public.
At the Pentagon, officials said Gates is not likely to offer a single
solution but, rather, a broad set of recommendations for changing the course in
Iraq. A senior Defense Department official, who spoke only on condition of
anonymity because Gates' advice to Bush is secret, said the recommendations
"would involve many aspects of how we can do things differently."
Bush, saddled with low approval ratings for his handling of Iraq, will host a
National Security Council meeting on Thursday at the ranch, but is not expected
to make any final decision on what he says will be a new way forward in Iraq.
Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Gates and
National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley will attend the meeting.
Stanzel said there could be other National Security Council meetings before
the president makes up his mind and delivers a speech to announce his decisions.
The speech is expected before the State of the Union address on January 23.
Bush is under mounting pressure to change US involvement in Iraq where
violence continued to escalate this month.
On Tuesday, the U.S. military reported that seven more American soldiers had
died, pushing the U.S. military death toll for the month to 90. With five days
remaining in the month, December is already the second deadliest month for the
U.S. military this year, behind the 105 soldiers killed in October.
The latest deaths also brought the number of U.S. military members killed
since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003 to at least 2,978 - five
more than the number killed in the September 11 attacks in New York, Washington
and Pennsylvania.
Stanzel said Bush continues to question advisers and think through the
consequences of various U.S. actions. "Our forces, coalition forces in Iraq are
continuing to take the fight to the enemy, and the president will announce a new
way forward when he's comfortable" with his decision, he said.