2007年VOA标准英语-US Senate Panel Approves Measure Opposing Troop(在线收听) |
By Deborah Tate
Hagel, a decorated Vietnam veteran and likely candidate for the Republican nomination for president next year, sharply criticized Mr. Bush's decision to send more troops into what he calls a civil war. He said, "We better be damned sure we know what we are doing, all of us, before we put 22,000 more Americans into that grinder." "Our resolution of disapproval is not - I emphasize not - an attempt to embarrass the president," he said. "It is not an attempt to demonstrate isolation. What it is, is an attempt to save the president from making a significant mistake regarding our policy in Iraq." Among the lawmakers who voted against the measure was the top Republican on the committee, Senator Richard Lugar of Indiana, who said while he, too, opposes a U.S. troop increase in Iraq, he also opposes the resolution. Lugar says he fears passage of the resolution will make it more difficult for Congress to work with the president to influence his Iraq policy. The resolution calls for the United States to transfer, under what it calls an appropriately expedited timeline, responsibility for internal security and halting sectarian violence in Iraq to the Iraqi government its security forces. It also calls on the Bush administration to engage Iraq's neighbors to develop a regional and internationally-sponsored peace and reconciliation process for Iraq, and says Iraqi leaders should lead the way in reaching a political settlement that could lead to peace. The resolution, which now goes to the Senate floor for consideration next week, is one of two that express opposition to Mr. Bush's plan. The other is sponsored by the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, Senator John Warner of Virginia. Senator Biden says he would consider working with Warner to combine the two resolutions into a single measure if that would increase Republican support. Biden, who is also considering a run for his party's nomination for president next year, said he would introduce tougher, binding legislation on Iraq if President Bush fails to heed the message of the symbolic resolution. The senator said he would consider, among other proposals, sponsoring a measure that would rewrite the resolution passed by Congress in 2002 that authorized the use of force in Iraq. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/1/36781.html |