1/9/07 C-SPAN2: SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY, NATIONAL PRES CLUB
Re: "The War In Iraq"
AUDIO:
http://www.apfn.net/pogo/L001I070109b1.MP3
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Edward Kennedy
NPC Luncheon
Jan. 9, 12:30 PM
Senator Edward M. Kennedy will give a major policy
address on the Iraq war and will outline the immediate
actions Congress must take to reassert its
[more]
http://npc.press.org/
Senator Edward Kennedy....Web Page
http://kennedy.senate.gov/
Sen. Kennedy...Index:
http://kennedy.senate.gov/senator/index.cfm
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Kennedy opposes money for troop boost
Updated 1/9/2007 2:26 PM ET USA TODAY
By Kathy Kiely, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — On the eve of President Bush's announcement
of a new Iraq policy, Sen. Edward Kennedy put Congress
on a collision course with the White House by proposing
legislation that would deny Bush money for sending more
troops to the war unless the president gets "clear and
specific new authorization" from Congress.
Bush will address the nation Wednesday night to present
a new war strategy that is expected to include sending
20,000 additional troops to the war-torn country.
As a senior member of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, Kennedy has been a leading voice of
opposition against the war in Iraq and has called for a
political solution to the conflict.
"The American people sent a clear message in November
that we must change course in Iraq and begin to withdraw
our troops, not escalate their presence," the
Massachusetts Democrat said in remarks at the National
Press Club. "The way to start is by acting on the
President's new plan."
He called any escalation of troops "an immense new
mistake."
But Kennedy said it was not enough to "simply speak out"
against an increase in troops "we must act to prevent
it."
The wording of Kennedy's bill is blunt: "President
George W. Bush should not be permitted to increase the
number of United States troops in harm's way in the
civil war in Iraq without a new authorization from
Congress that reflects the reality on the ground in
Iraq."
Kennedy said Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., will introduce
similar legislation in the House.
Kennedy said his bill would not affect soldiers already
in the field, but is aimed at any increase in troops.
"The best immediate way to support our troops is by
refusing to inject more and more of them into the
cauldron of a civil war that can be resolved only by the
people and government of Iraq," he said.
AUDIO: Kennedy speaks at National Press Club
White House press secretary Tony Snow, without
specifically addressing Kennedy's charges, said today
the president "understands there is a lot of public
anxiety" about the war. Yet he said that Americans
"don't want another Sept. 11" type of terrorist attack
and it is wiser to confront terrorists overseas in Iraq
and other battlegrounds rather than in the United
States.
Democrats, while generally opposing Bush's Iraq policy,
are divided over how to use the budget process to
pressure Bush over Iraq. Under the Constitution, the
president has broad war-making powers, while Congress
controls spending.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., says
Democrats will "look at everything" in their power to
curb the war short of cutting money for troops already
in the field.
Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., said Sunday on NBC's Meet the
Press that attempts by Congress to "micromanage" the
president's role as commander-in-chief might be
unconstitutional.
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the new chairman of the Armed
Services Committee, said he would only consider an
increase in U.S. forces in Iraq if Bush agreed to start
withdrawing troops within six months.
"We've got to focus the attention of the Iraqis on their
responsibility for their own country," Levin told the
Detroit Free Press. "The only way to tell them is that
we're going to redeploy our forces in 4 to 6 months."
After meeting with the president on Monday, several
senators, including Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas,
said the plan calls for sending 20,000 extra troops to
Baghdad and the western Anbar province, a base of the
mostly Sunni insurgency and foreign al-Qaeda fighters.
Senators who attended the White House briefing indicated
that the increase in troops would be to "benchmarks"
that the Iraqi government must meet. These include
sending more Iraqi troops to Baghdad and reaching a
political settlement that will including sharing the
nation's oil resources, particularly with the minority
Sunnis.
The senators said the president expressed confidence
that the Iraqi government could meet the benchmarks, but
several of the senators remained skeptical.
"We've had these benchmarks before and to no avail,"
Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, said after the meeting.
"Why should we increase our exposure to risk?"
But whether Snowe and other GOP skeptics of Bush's plan,
including Gordon Smith of Oregon and Sen. Susan Collins
of Maine, will agree to Kennedy's plan is doubtful.
"It would be a dishonorable thing for the Congress to
budget away the bullets at a time when their commander
in chief had ordered them to hold their place in the
battlefront," said Smith.
Contributing: Associated Press
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