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US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi(R) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid(L) participate in a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington DC. Anti-war Democrats fine-tuned a new line of attack over Iraq Friday, hoping to exploit President George W. Bush's political woes with a fresh call for troop withdrawal timetables.(Xinhua/AFP Photo)
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WASHINGTON, June 29 (Xinhua) -- Democratic leaders of
the U.S. Congress said on Friday that they would keep pressuring President
George W. Bush on a timetable for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said at a news conference
that she would introduce legislation next month to authorize withdrawing
American troops from Iraq within 120 days and to complete the withdrawal by
April 1, 2008.
The United States would leave some cover forces to
fight terrorists and protect U.S. facilities in Iraq, she said.
"But we have the support of the American people, who
want this war to come to an end," she said.
Senate Democrats would introduce their own measure in
July, Majority Leader Harry Reid said.
But Reid was not sure whether he could get the
necessary votes to approve such a bill.
"I don't know if we can or not," he said of clearing
the 60-vote hurdle. "We're going to keep pushing, because it's the right thing
to do."
At the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said
previous legislation that requested progress reports on Iraq in July and
September should be followed. "It seems to me that Congress has laid out a
sensible timetable and we ought to adhere to it," he said.
The Congress approved a war spending bill in late
April which set a timetable to withdraw U.S. troops out of Iraq, but the bill
was vetoed by Bush on May 1, the fourth anniversary of his "Mission
Accomplished" speech, in which he declared on May 1, 2003,that major combat
operations in Iraq had ended.
Currently there are over 150,000 U.S. troops in Iraq,
and more than 3,500 American soldiers and tens of thousands of Iraqis have been
killed in the country since the war started in March
2003.