Republican Rebels Defy Bush Line
The Republican leadership was struggling to maintain a united front with the White House on the Iraq war yesterday after two leading senators broke ranks to vote against the proposed troop increase.
In the latest sign of rebellion against President George Bush's plan to send 21,500 more troops to Iraq, Republican senators Chuck Hagel of Nebraska and Olympia Snowe of Maine agreed to co-sponsor a Democratic resolution against the additional forces.
"It is wrong to put American troops in the middle of a civil war - Iraqis killing Iraqis, Shias killing Sunnis, Sunnis killing each other, Shias killing each other," Mr Hagel, a Vietnam veteran, told ABC television. "To feed more American troops into this bloodbath is wrong."
Mr Hagel is viewed as a potential contender in the 2008 presidential elections, which would make him very attentive to opinion polls showing a majority of Americans opposed to the troop increase.
Such calculations could also underlie the decision by a conservative Republican senator, Sam Brownback, to break with the White House. He is due to announce his candidacy in 2008 from his home state of Kansas tomorrow. On his return from a trip to Iraq on Wednesday, he called for a new round of diplomacy instead of more troops, arguing that the Iraqi government was not sufficiently engaged with trying to bring peace.
"All of this suggests that, at the present time, the United States cares more about a peaceful Iraq than the Iraqis do. If that is the case, it is difficult to understand why more US troops would make a difference," Mr Brownback told the Senate.
With many Republicans worried that Iraq could prove as devastating in the 2008 presidential vote as it did in 2006, the party has been hard-pressed to maintain loyalty with the White House. A number of party rebels are from states that voted for Democrats in November, and are afraid of losing their seats in 2008.
The White House spokesman Tony Snow has indicated that those who embarrass the administration will not face an easy time. "What message does Congress intend to give?" he asked. "And who does it think the audience is? Is the audience merely the president? Is it the voting American public or, in an age of instant communication, is it also al-Qaida?"
In the latest sign of rebellion against President George Bush's plan to send 21,500 more troops to Iraq, Republican senators Chuck Hagel of Nebraska and Olympia Snowe of Maine agreed to co-sponsor a Democratic resolution against the additional forces.
"It is wrong to put American troops in the middle of a civil war - Iraqis killing Iraqis, Shias killing Sunnis, Sunnis killing each other, Shias killing each other," Mr Hagel, a Vietnam veteran, told ABC television. "To feed more American troops into this bloodbath is wrong."
Mr Hagel is viewed as a potential contender in the 2008 presidential elections, which would make him very attentive to opinion polls showing a majority of Americans opposed to the troop increase.
Such calculations could also underlie the decision by a conservative Republican senator, Sam Brownback, to break with the White House. He is due to announce his candidacy in 2008 from his home state of Kansas tomorrow. On his return from a trip to Iraq on Wednesday, he called for a new round of diplomacy instead of more troops, arguing that the Iraqi government was not sufficiently engaged with trying to bring peace.
"All of this suggests that, at the present time, the United States cares more about a peaceful Iraq than the Iraqis do. If that is the case, it is difficult to understand why more US troops would make a difference," Mr Brownback told the Senate.
With many Republicans worried that Iraq could prove as devastating in the 2008 presidential vote as it did in 2006, the party has been hard-pressed to maintain loyalty with the White House. A number of party rebels are from states that voted for Democrats in November, and are afraid of losing their seats in 2008.
The White House spokesman Tony Snow has indicated that those who embarrass the administration will not face an easy time. "What message does Congress intend to give?" he asked. "And who does it think the audience is? Is the audience merely the president? Is it the voting American public or, in an age of instant communication, is it also al-Qaida?"

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