http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/05/AR2007010501080_pf.html


Pelosi, Reid Urge Bush To Begin Iraq Pullout
President Considering Three 'Surge' Options

By Peter Baker and Robin Wright
Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, January 6, 2007; A01





House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid declared 
yesterday that "it is time to bring the war to a close" and warned President 
Bush that sending more U.S. troops to Iraq would be unacceptable to the 
Democratic majorities that have just taken over Congress.

Directly challenging Bush's wartime leadership on their second day in charge on 
Capitol Hill, Democrats Pelosi (Calif.) and Reid (Nev.) sent Bush a letter 
suggesting that, instead of starting a short-term escalation, he begin a phased 
withdrawal of U.S. forces in the next four to six months. The mission of 
remaining troops, they said, should be shifted away from combat toward more 
training, logistics and counterterrorism.

The newly ascendant Democrats are trying to preempt the president before he 
announces his new strategy. As he prepares for a nationally televised address 
next week, officials said, Bush is considering three main options to bolster 
U.S. forces in Iraq: a relatively modest deployment of fewer than 4,000 
additional troops, a middle-ground alternative involving about 9,000 and, the 
most aggressive idea, flowing 20,000 more troops into the country.

In a speech today unveiling his own revised security plan, Iraqi Prime Minister 
Nouri al-Maliki is expected to publicly welcome additional U.S. troops, a 
condition requested by the Bush administration. Maliki's cooperation is pivotal 
to Bush's own efforts. Bush told Maliki in a videoconference Thursday that the 
United States is willing to help but that Maliki has to deliver along the way, 
U.S. officials said.

In preparation for the shift in strategy, Bush reshuffled his national security 
leadership team yesterday. He replaced the top two generals running the Iraq 
war, named a new Army chief of staff, moved his intelligence director over to 
the State Department and put a veteran officer in charge of intelligence. 
Officials have said he also plans to move his ambassador in Baghdad to the 
United Nations and replace him with a veteran diplomat.

Over the next few days before his speech, Bush is conducting intensive 
consultations with lawmakers, foreign allies and advisers. He met with 
lawmakers from both parties yesterday and plans to talk with leaders of 
Britain, Australia and possibly Denmark, countries that still have major 
military contingents in Iraq, according to U.S. officials and diplomats. The 
White House said he will talk with both Pelosi and Reid before announcing his 
new strategy.

White House press secretary Tony Snow said the sessions with lawmakers have 
featured "some vigorous exchanges" and have been useful. "The fact is that 
these meetings may not be happy-face 'Kumbaya,' but they have been very 
constructive in the sense that people are talking respectfully about important 
issues and expressing their ideas," he said. "And some of them are quite 
interesting. And we're taking them into account."

But some lawmakers have left the meetings unsatisfied. Sen. Ben Nelson (Neb.), 
a conservative Democrat needed by Bush if he hopes to have any support across 
the aisle, said he pressed the president yesterday to provide a clear and 
specific mission before ordering additional forces to Iraq. "The White House 
has to make the case for sending in more troops before they send the troops," 
he said. "We need a new direction, not just a new slogan."

Even many Republicans appear unenthusiastic about troop increases. Senate 
Minority Whip Trent Lott (R-Miss.) said Thursday night on MSNBC's "Hardball" 
that he might say no to the surge. "I want to know what it all is," Lott said 
of Bush's overall plan. "But here's my main point: We've got to change the 
status quo. At some point we've got to say to the Iraqis, 'Congratulations. 
Saddam is dead. We've given you an opportunity for peace and freedom. It's 
yours.' "

The letter by Pelosi and Reid sent a signal that the new congressional 
leadership intends to be aggressive in voicing opposition to Bush's handling of 
the war. With their new majorities, they have a bigger political megaphone and 
more ability to bring pressure to bear. At the same time, Pelosi and Reid have 
eschewed using the main legislative mechanism to change policy, namely cutting 
off funding for the war.

"Surging forces is a strategy that you have already tried and that has already 
failed," Pelosi and Reid wrote. "Like many current and former military leaders, 
we believe that trying again would be a serious mistake. . . . Adding more 
combat troops will only endanger more Americans and stretch our military to the 
breaking point for no strategic gain."

By releasing the sternly worded letter, Democratic leaders hoped to jump ahead 
of Bush and set the agenda for the weekend talk shows. Rep. Rahm Emanuel 
(Ill.), chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, said the party wants to 
address even the terminology of the White House plan, defining it not as a 
"surge" but as an "escalation." "People are going to know [the president] has a 
very critical audience in the Democratic Congress on this proposal," he said.

The prospect of increasing troop levels has been greeted with so much hostility 
that some lawmakers are questioning whether Bush is serious. "A surge is not a 
new strategy. A surge is a new tactic that does nothing to change the 
underlying strategy that has so clearly failed," said Rep. Loretta Sanchez 
(D-Calif.), a member of the House Armed Services Committee.

"I don't know if Mr. Bush even believes in this so-called surge," scoffed Rep. 
Neil Abercrombie (D-Hawaii), another member of the committee. "The neocons are 
trying to test the new Congress to see how we respond."

While the din of opposition has risen, the administration has not made a public 
case for why more troops would be the answer. Even senior military officers 
have expressed deep skepticism in public and outright opposition in private. 
Aside from some neoconservative scholars, virtually the only prominent voices 
advocating the troop increase are Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Joseph I. 
Lieberman (Conn.), an independent who caucuses with the Democrats.

Bush is looking at three broad options involving one to five additional 
brigades, according to U.S. officials. The smallest increase would basically be 
limited to the brigade from the Army's 82nd Airborne Division, comprising fewer 
than 4,000 troops, which has already departed for Kuwait. It would eventually 
be deployed in Baghdad.

The second option would involve deploying another Army brigade to Baghdad and 
two battalions of Marines to Anbar, the volatile province that has been a 
battlefield for the Sunni insurgency and foreign fighters associated with 
al-Qaeda. The Marines could not be deployed until February, U.S. officials 
said. The joint Army and Marine deployment would bring the increase to between 
9,000 and 10,000 troops.

The third option would supplement the first and second with additional Army 
brigades, bringing the total to about 20,000, largely deployed in the Iraqi 
capital. But U.S. officials said this would take considerable time -- possibly 
three or four months, with a complete deployment as late as May -- because of 
the difficulty of assembling additional troops through accelerating planned 
deployments and remobilizing reserves, U.S. officials said.

The Bush administration is also considering a troop increase that would play 
out in phases and in response to the performance of the Iraqi government in 
following through on its promises to go after illegal militias and crack down 
on sectarian violence. Maliki has in turn requested more operational control 
over Iraqi troops, which Washington is tentatively prepared to give him, U.S. 
officials said.

Bush installed new U.S. figures yesterday to manage efforts in Iraq. As 
expected, he replaced Army Gen. John P. Abizaid, head of U.S. Central Command 
overseeing Middle East operations, with Navy Adm. William J. Fallon, and 
replaced Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the Iraq commander, with Army Lt. Gen. David 
H. Petraeus, who would be given a fourth star. Bush also confirmed that John D. 
Negroponte, director of national intelligence, will become deputy secretary of 
state and be replaced by Navy Adm. John M. McConnell.

Snow said the generals are not being replaced because of their resistance to 
increasing troop levels, calling Casey "magnificent" and Abizaid "an 
extraordinary officer." Casey will become Army chief of staff, and Abizaid is 
retiring.

Democrats signaled that they will start closely examining administration 
decisions on Iraq next week. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee announced a 
schedule for four weeks of hearings on Iraq featuring witnesses such as 
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice; members of the Iraq Study Group, which 
recommended a new course in Iraq; a slew of former secretaries of state and 
defense; current and retired generals; and Middle East scholars.

"Our purpose is not to revisit the past," said Chairman Joseph R. Biden Jr. 
(D-Del.), "but to help build a consensus behind a new course for America in 
Iraq."

Staff writer Jonathan Weisman contributed to this report.


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