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http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/050627/27bush.htm

6/27/05
Hit by friendly fire

With his polls down, Bush takes flak on Iraq from a host of
critics--including some in his own party

By Kevin Whitelaw
US News and World Report

Nebraska Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel is angry. He's upset about the more
than 1,700 U.S. soldiers killed and nearly 13,000 wounded in Iraq. He's
also aggravated by the continued string of sunny assessments from the Bush
administration, such as Vice President Dick Cheney's recent remark that
the insurgency is in its "last throes." "Things aren't getting better;
they're getting worse. The White House is completely disconnected from
reality," Hagel tells U.S. News. "It's like they're just making it up as
they go along. The reality is that we're losing in Iraq."

That's strikingly blunt talk from a member of the president's party, even
one cast as something of a pariah in the GOP because of his early
skepticism about the war. "I got beat up pretty good by my own party and
the White House that I was not a loyal Republican," he says. Today, he
notes, things are changing: "More and more of my colleagues up here are
concerned."

Indeed, there are signs that the politics of the Iraq war are being
reshaped by the continuing tide of bad news. Take this month in Iraq, with
47 U.S. troops killed in the first 15 days. That's already five more than
the toll for the entire month of June last year. With the rate of
insurgent attacks near an all-time high and the war's cost set to top $230
billion, more politicians on both sides of the aisle are responding to
opinion polls that show a growing number of Americans favoring a
withdrawal from Iraq. Republican Sens. Lincoln Chafee and Lindsey Graham
have voiced their concerns. And two Republicans, including the congressman
who brought "freedom fries" to the Capitol, even joined a pair of
Democratic colleagues in sponsoring a bill calling for a troop withdrawal
plan to be drawn up by year's end. "I feel confident that the opposition
is going to build," says Rep. Ron Paul, the other Republican sponsor and a
longtime opponent of the war.

Sagging polls. The measure is not likely to go anywhere, but Hagel calls
it "a major crack in the dike." Whether or not that's so, the White House
has reason to worry that the assortment of critiques of Bush's wartime
performance may be approaching a tipping point. Only 41 percent of
Americans now support Bush's handling of the Iraq war, the lowest mark
ever in the Associated Press-Ipsos poll. And the Iraq news has combined
with a lethargic economy and doubts about the president's Social Security
proposals to push Bush's overall approval ratings near all-time lows. For
now, most Republicans remain publicly loyal to the White House. "Why would
you give your enemies a timetable?" asks House Majority Leader Tom DeLay.
"[Bush] doesn't fight the war on news articles or television or on polls."

Still, the Bush administration is planning to hit back, starting this
week, with a renewed public-relations push by the president. Bush will
host Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari and has scheduled a major speech
for June 28, the anniversary of the handover of power to an Iraqi
government from U.S. authorities. But Congress's patience could wear very
thin going into an election year. "If things don't start to turn around in
six months, then it may be too late," says Hagel. "I think it's that
serious."

Bush's exit strategy--which depends on a successful Iraqi political
process--got a boost last week when Sunni and Shiite politicians ended
weeks of wrangling over how to increase Sunni representation on the
constitution-writing committee. Now, however, committee members have less
than two months before their mid-August deadline. And given how long it
took to resolve who gets to draft the document, it's hard to imagine a
quick accord on the politically explosive issues they face.


With Ilana Ozernoy and Terence Samuel

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