US Senator says Iraq is near chaos
(AP) Updated: 2006-10-24 07:54 WASHINGTON - Under election-year
pressure to change course in Iraq, the Bush administration said Monday there are
no plans for dramatic shifts in policy or for ultimatums to Baghdad to force
progress.
Just two weeks before the Nov. 7 elections that will determine whether
Republicans retain control of Congress, the White House tried to calm political
anxieties about deteriorating security in Iraq. Both Democratic and Republican
lawmakers are calling on President Bush to change his war plan.
Relatives of police recruits killed in an ambush near Baqouba
Sunday cry as they wait to collect bodies in front of Imam Ali hospital in
Baghdad's Shiite enclave of Sadr City, Monday Oct. 23, 2006.
[AP]
| "We're on the verge of chaos, and the
current plan is not working," Sen. Lindsey Graham (news, bio, voting record),
R-S.C., said in an Associated Press interview. US and Iraqi officials should be
held accountable for the lack of progress, said Graham, a Republican who is a
frequent critic of the administration's policies.
Asked who in particular should be held accountable - Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld, perhaps, or the generals leading the war - Graham said:
"All of them. It's their job to come up with a game plan" to end the violence.
Bush, in a CNBC interview, said, "Well, I've been talking about a change in
tactics ever since I - ever since we went in, because the role of the
commander in chief is to say to our generals, `You adjust to the enemy on the
battlefield.'"
Rumsfeld, in remarks at the Pentagon, said US government and military
officials were working with Iraq to set broad time frames for when Iraqis can
take over 16 provinces that are still under the control of US troops. He said
officials were not talking about penalizing the Iraqis if they don't hit certain
benchmarks.
The Iraqis have taken control of two southern provinces but have been slow to
take the lead in others, particularly those around Baghdad and in the volatile
regions north and west of the capital city. Rumsfeld said specific target dates
probably will not be set. Instead, he said there might be a broader time
frame - such as a one- to three-month window - for the Iraqis to take
control of certain provinces.
Rumsfeld visited the White House early Monday with Gen. Peter Pace, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Rumsfeld said the United States was looking at
when the Iraqis would move close to setting up a reconciliation process to help
quell worsening sectarian violence between Sunnis and Shiites.
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