That's alright...they'd have criticized Churchill for taunting Hitler too.

Bruce


Congressional Democrats Criticize Bush Speech By Deborah Tate

Capitol Hill
06 October 2005

Congressional Democrats say President Bush's speech Thursday was long on
rhetoric and short on specifics about how the administration plans to reach
its goals in the war in Iraq and the war on terrorism.

Minority Democrats in Congress were quick to criticize Mr. Bush's address,
including Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island, a member of the Senate Armed
Services Committee.

"The president said Iraq is the central front in the war on terror," said
Mr. Reed.  "It is the central front because he made it the central front.
There were no extensive training camps for militants in Iraq before we
arrived."

Democrats said Mr. Bush's speech was full of generalities about the war in
Iraq, but it fell short of laying out a specific plan for achieving success
there.

Assistant Senate Minority Leader Dick Durbin of Illinois.

"How many Iraqi battalions need to be ready for battle before the first
American soldier can come home," said Mr. Durbin.  "Why have we failed to
prepare more Iraqi soldiers to protect their own country despite the
commitment and all the rhetoric we supposedly have heard and seen over the
last year or two?"

Senator Durbin was referring to an assessment from Pentagon officials, who
told Congress last week that only one of Iraq's 100 battalions is able to
fight without U.S. support.  The top U.S. commander in Iraq, General George
Casey, says the number is down from three battalions, because standards for
the highest readiness rating have become more rigorous during the past few
months.

Senator Durbin also wanted the president to discuss the progress of
reconstruction in Iraq, in terms of how much electricity and clean water
have been restored to Iraqi homes and businesses.

The top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Joe
Biden of Delaware, said he is disappointed Mr. Bush did not discuss plans to
secure political success in Iraq, with Iraqis to vote on a new constitution
in a referendum on October 15.

"We still do not know what the plan is to overcome deep Sunni hostility to
the constitution and reconcile the growing sectarian differences that
threaten to divide Iraq, not unite it," said Mr. Biden.

Senator Biden wondered how Mr. Bush could claim progress in Iraq with
questions remaining about prospects for Iraqi unity, a timetable for a U.S.
troop withdrawal, and a plan to move reconstruction projects forward.

"In each of these areas, Iraqis today as I speak, are worse off than they
were before the war," he added.

On the issue of the war on terrorism, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of
California said the war in Iraq diverted U.S. attention away from the search
for Osama bin Laden, the mastermind behind the September 11,
2001 attacks.

"If we had stayed focused in Afghanistan from the start we might have been
farther along in the fight against terror than we are because he diverted
our resources into Iraq," she noted.

Senator Reed of Rhode Island said Iraq has also been a problem for the
administration's plans to promote democracy around the world.

"The president talked about ultimately advancing democracy as the antidote
to this jihadist approach to the world.  Iraq is complicating our ability to
do just that.  When Turkish women's rights advocates berate Karen Hughes in
Turkey about our position in Iraq, that is not a sign that we are making
progress with those people with whom we need to make progress,"
said Mr. Reed.

Senator Reed was referring to Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy
Karen Hughes, who recently met with a Turkish women's rights group in
Istanbul as part of a regional tour aimed at improving the U.S.
image overseas.  The women activists used the meeting to express their anger
over the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

Senator Reed said he was also disappointed that Mr.
Bush's speech fell short in proposing concrete ways to counter Islamic
extremism.  For example, he said, the administration has offered no
proposals to provide alternatives to madrassas, Islamic schools which have
often been linked to militant groups.

While Democrats were critical of the speech,
Republicans welcomed it.   Senator Rick Santorum of
Pennsylvania said the President should have delivered it a few years ago.

Mr. Bush's speech comes as public opinion polls show most Americans
disapproving of the way he is handling the war in Iraq.

000.



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