2007年VOA标准英语-Bush Asks for Patience as Iraq War Enters 5th Y(在线收听) |
By Sean Maroney
Four years to the day that President Bush ordered the invasion of Iraq to begin, the president addressed the American people from the White House, asking for more patience. In the four years since "Operation: Shock and Awe," Iraq has struggled to find stability. Mounting attacks by insurgents and al Qaida terrorists, as well as suicide bombings, have strained the country and its people almost to a breaking point. President Bush has pledged nearly 22,000 additional U.S. troops to secure Baghdad and Iraq's troubled al-Anbar Province. Nearly one-half have already been deployed. With more than 3200 U.S. troops killed in Iraq so far, opinion polls show many Americans believe the war was a mistake and want the troops to come home within the next 12 months. Recent protests in the United States and abroad have counted down the days leading up to the war's anniversary. "Forty years ago, there was a march on the Pentagon,” Sheehan said. “And here we are, 40 years later, marching on the Pentagon in another illegal and immoral war. When is it going to stop?" Other anti-war activists and some veterans also took the stage, calling on the Bush administration to change course. "I will be brutally honest, it is insane to believe that more of the same will end it,” one Iraq war veteran said. “Our clever signs, our passionate speeches and our large crowds alone -- if that could end the war, we would not be here today." Still other protesters demonstrated in favor of the U.S. policy in Iraq. For them, the anti-war protests are a move in the wrong direction. Jane Johnson has a son deployed in Afghanistan. She also had a 22-year-old son killed while serving in Baghdad. "To me, they are basically spitting on my son's grave," Johnson said. Juan Torres helped lead the anti-war protesters during Saturday's march in Washington. His son also died while deployed overseas. "I come from Argentina to this beautiful country for my American dream,” Torres said. “And my American dream is destroyed forever. My only son is dead now. This is why I came here. Because I don't want to see any more kids die." The House of Representatives is expected to vote this week on an emergency war spending bill. Democrats control the House and want to set a deadline for the removal of troops from Iraq. President Bush has promised to veto the bill. He says any timeline would break U.S. commitments to Iraqis. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/3/37701.html |