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  • U.S. House Of Representatives Voted To Withdraw Most U.S. Troops Fro

    U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES VOTED TO WITHDRAW MOST U.S. TROOPS FROM IRAQ

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    13.07.2007 14:30 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The U.S. House of Representatives last night voted
    to withdraw most U.S. troops from Iraq by April 1, acting hours after
    President Bush urged Congress not to interfere in war strategy and
    to maintain funding for the military.

    The 223-to-201 vote, which is not enough to override Bush's threatened
    veto, came after the president delivered a report to Congress that said
    Iraq is making satisfactory progress on only eight of 18 benchmarks
    the United States has set for it.

    Earlier yesterday, Bush defended his handling of the war and sought
    to minimize the role of an increasingly restless Congress in the
    conflict. He said the House and Senate should provide money for the
    troops but leave the war strategy to him and U.S. military commanders.

    "Congress has all the right in the world to fund.

    That's their main involvement in this war, which is to provide funds
    for our troops," Bush said at a White House press conference.

    Mindful that Democrats, and some Republicans, on Capitol Hill may try
    to force a change in strategy, the president said lawmakers should not
    be "determining how troops are positioned, or troop strength. . . . I
    don't think that would be good for the country."

    While the House Democrats could not attract enough Republican support
    to override a veto, last night's vote signaled continued discontent
    with Bush's war strategy, and could be followed by a similar effort
    in the Senate.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the president's progress report
    "makes clear that not even the White House can conclude there has been
    significant progress." But House Republican leader John A. Boehner
    said the House vote was meaningless, adding, "There is only one way
    to end the war on radical jihadists, and that is to win."

    The House bill calls for the withdrawal of combat troops to begin
    within 120 days, and to be completed by April 1. It allows for a
    small force to train Iraqis, protect U.S. assets, and fight terrorists.

    The vote was mostly along party lines, with 219 Democrats and four
    Republicans in favor, and 191 Republicans and 10 Democrats opposed.

    Bush had urged Congress to wait for a more complete Iraq progress
    report in September, but the Democratic-led Congress pushed forward
    yesterday with their effort to mandate a pullback or pullout of
    troops within months. Lawmakers pointed to a provision included in a
    war-budget bill earlier this year that required significant progress
    in Iraq to justify continued funding, The Boston Globe reports.
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