Related: Bush takes blame in Iraq,
adds troops
Special Report:
Execution of
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Special report: Tension escalates in
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U.S. President George W. Bush said Wednesday night
that he has ordered more than 20,000 additional American troops to Iraq,
as part of his new Iraq strategy, in a prime-time televised
speech. Photo Gallery
>>> |
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Democrats launched a
fierce attack on President George W. Bush's new Iraq strategy that he announced
on Wednesday night, saying the new plan "moves the American commitment in Iraq
in the wrong direction."
In the televised Democratic response immediately
after Bush's prime-time address to the nation, Senate Democratic Whip Richard
Durbin said "escalation of this war (in Iraq) is not the change the American
people called for in the last election."
"Instead of a new direction, the president's plan
moves the American commitment in Iraq in the wrong direction," he said.
Durbin blamed Bush for ignoring the "strong advice of
most of his own top generals" by ordering more troops to Iraq.
"Twenty thousand American soldiers are too few to end
this civil war in Iraq and too many American lives to risk on top of those we've
already lost," Durbin said. Over 3,000 U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq
since the war started in March 2003.
"It's time for President Bush to face the reality of
Iraq," and it is time to "begin the orderly re-deployment of our troops so that
they can begin coming home soon," he said.
In a joint statement following Bush's address, House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer and Senate Democratic Whip Richard Durbin said that American voters
"delivered a strong message of no confidence in the president's Iraq policy and
clearly expressed their desire for a new direction" in last November's
elections.
The statement said Bush chose to escalate the U.S.
involvement in Iraq's civil war by proposing a substantial increase in the
number of American forces, and the proposal endangered American national
security by placing additional burdens on the already over-extended U.S.
military.
The Democratic leaders said that rather than
escalating the U.S. involvement in Iraq by sending additional troops, a new plan
should include shifting greater responsibility to the Iraqis for their own
security, and transforming the principal mission of U.S. forces from combat to
training, logistics, force protection, and counter-terrorism operations.
The new plan should also include a phased
re-deployment of U.S. forces that should start in the next four to six months;
and an aggressive diplomatic strategy, both within the region and beyond, they
said.