Democrats Attack Iraq Security
Proposal
By Michael
Abramowitz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 24, 2008; A09
The leading Democratic
presidential candidates and their
allies on
Capitol Hill have launched
fierce attacks in recent days on a
White House plan to forge a new,
long-term security agreement with
the Iraqi government, complaining
that the administration is trying to
lock in a lasting
U.S. military presence in
Iraq before the next president
takes office.
Among the top critics is
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.).
She has used the past two Democratic
presidential debates to blast
President Bush for his effort,
as she put it Monday in
South Carolina, "to try to bind
the United States government and his
successor to his failed policy."
Her concerns have been echoed by
Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) and
other Democratic lawmakers who are
focusing their fire on the
administration's plans for a
long-term commitment to Iraq, after
gaining little traction for their
efforts to force a faster withdrawal
of U.S. combat troops there.
"How do you make an commitment to
a country where there is no way of
measuring whether that country is
likely to have a functioning
government?"
Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (Del.),
chairman of the Foreign Relations
Committee, asked in an interview
yesterday.
Biden recently wrote a letter to
Bush expressing concern that the
agreement could "mire us in an Iraqi
civil war indefinitely." Biden and
other lawmakers held out the
possibility that they will try to
block the administration's plans to
reach a bilateral accord with Iraq,
or at least seek to compel the White
House to submit any such agreement
for congressional approval.
Administration officials said the
next president will have full
authority to withdraw troops if that
is desired. They said Democrats are
reading too much into the plan,
which they describe as an effort to
give the next commander in chief the
tools to deal with the situation in
Iraq.
Efforts to secure an agreement
began with little fanfare late last
year. The White House announced then
that it was opening negotiations
with the Iraqis on a new bilateral
agreement that would cover how the
two countries will relate
politically, economically,
culturally and militarily in the
years ahead.
The agreement would include
"security assurances and
commitments" to Iraq to deter
foreign aggression, according to a
declaration of principles that Bush
and Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki signed in
November. Officials said they hope
to conclude the pact by mid-year, in
time to replace the expiring
United Nations mandate that
authorizes the operations of
coalition troops in Iraq.
As described by administration
officials, the accord would amount
to a standard "status of forces
agreement" with a friendly country.
It would cover such issues as the
power U.S. forces would have to
arrest and detain Iraqis, or the
rules covering engagement with the
enemy.
Historically, such agreements
have not been submitted to Congress
for approval, though administration
officials concede that if they were
to agree to certain security
"guarantees" for the Iraqis, they
would have to bring the matter
before the Senate. Lawmakers are
insisting that the proposed
agreement is already broad enough to
require congressional review.
"While the exact structure of the
forthcoming agreement is yet to be
negotiated, the U.S. has concluded
similar agreements with more than
120 countries around the world,
including many countries in the
region," said White House spokesman
Gordon Johndroe. He also
addressed a key concern raised by
Clinton and other Democrats: "The
Iraqi government has indicated that
they do not want permanent U.S.
bases in Iraq, and we are not
seeking them."
The accord has stirred liberal
activists, with the advocacy group
MoveOn.org recently garnering
more than 250,000 signatures on a
petition demanding congressional
involvement in any agreement.
Democrats' suspicions have been
further fanned in recent weeks by
comments from Bush and from senior
Iraqi officials suggesting that a
significant U.S. troop presence in
Iraq could endure for years. During
his recent trip to the
Middle East, Bush spoke of how
"long-term success will require
active U.S. engagement that outlasts
my presidency."
The number of U.S. troops in Iraq
is set to decrease from 160,000 to
130,000 by summer.
Rep. Bill Delahunt (D-Mass.)
convened a hearing yesterday to
explore the proposed agreement. He
dismissed the contention that the
proposal is routine, saying that
administration officials declined to
explain themselves before his
Foreign Affairs subcommittee.
"We don't trust this
administration," he said, suggesting
that at first glance, the scope of
the proposed agreement goes well
beyond that of a standard
status-of-forces agreement.
Despite such sentiments, Bush and
his advisers express the private
conviction that any presidential
successor will find it hard to
disengage from Iraq, no matter what
is said on the campaign trail. One
senior official, not authorized to
speak publicly, said Clinton or any
another would-be president will
eventually welcome the agreement
that the Bush administration intends
to negotiate with the Iraqis.
"Is the next president going to
say, 'I don't want to fight
al-Qaeda in Iraq'? Maybe," this
official said. "But I think they are
going to want to, and we will give
them the proper authorities."