News General info My Gateway State Regions Geography History Legislation Politics Economy Society
Science Education Sport Culture Ecology Tourism NGO International organizations Afghanistan
AIDA Travels The intellectual properties Health Commonwealth of Independent States
WORLD BANK
EMBASSY OF USA
    Students start the Year
    The doctors from all heart
    The Internet press a conference
    We invite to take part in opening
    Pragma Corporation
    U.S. Government Project Helps Tajikistan
    Celebration 201 military bases
    Equipment For Îmîn
    USA Improves education
    Healthy Lifestyle Education
    Warm clothes requiring
    USA encourages business partnership
    Children have received clothes
    Gift to the frontier guards
    The help to the Tadjik frontier guards
    USA supports education in RŇ
    Bush greeting on Eid-al-Adha
    New law on trafficking
    CA now arc of opportunity not crisis
    Week journal under the rights of the man
    The new initiative on study of languages
    USA aspire to involve the students
    Third American corner
    High quality check points
    U.S.Ambassador Hoagland helps children
    US funds
    US Provides 4.4 million
    USA forgive to Afghanistan a duty
    Student Visas
    US and Russian ambassadors
    U.S. provides financial support
    Mercy Corps delivers products
    Programme Communities communications
    Education programme
    Earth day
    Nominee of the ambassador
    Videoconference
    Export of Tajik fruits
    The USAID Project
    Assistant of the state Secretary of USA
    U.S. Embassy in Dushanbe
    The program for the farmers
    Receptions of the VISAS of USA In Dushan
    Communities communication program
    Grin Cart
    An exchange program for secondary school
    Community connections program
    Memorandum of property transfer
    Law enforcement support of the US to Tjk
    Handover of equipment
    Opening of the youth centre in Khujand
    Opening of the exemplary centre Kanibada
    Equipment for tajik border troops
    The program of the grants Reagan-Fascell
    Population of USA
    Safety in Afghanistan
    Muslim prepare to a holiday
    Environmental protection campaign
    American museums
    USA Representative - about study
    The American educational institutions
    60-I Anniversary
    Situation with freedom of religion
    Opening of international education week
    Small grants
    Members of congress
    Strategy
    Trafficking
    Bush administration
    Competition of the educational grants
    The embassy passes medicines
    Yazgulam school
    USA gives the urgent humanitarian help
THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION IN TAJIKISTAN
THE INTERNATIONAL HELP
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION ON MIGRATION
UNICEF
SWITZERLAND THE TADJIK COOPERATION
PROJECT MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT

Country Gateways
About us
Search
Submit >>
Members Login
Username:    
Password:    
  Login >>
Weather in Dushanbe
30/07/2010 9:00 pm TJT

 26° 
 Sunny 
 Dewpoint:
 13°
 Barometer:
 
 Humidity:
 44%
 Visibility:
 8 km
 Wind:
 N 3 kph
 Today   Tomorrow   Mon   Tue 

Sunny
35°..18°
ºC

Sunny
35°..18°
ºC

Partl
35°..19°
ºC

Sunny
36°..19°
ºC
Exchange Rates
30/7/2010
  
International organizations/ EMBASSY OF USA / Members of congress  Home

MEMBERS OF CONGRESS QUESTION IRAQ PLAN, SEEK ALTERNATIVES

Nonbinding resolution passed by Senate Foreign Relations Committee


Washington -- Senate leaders from both major U.S. political parties are crafting resolutions that formally express concern over President Bush’s plan to increase U.S. troop levels in Iraq.

Senators stressed that they do not seek to embarrass or undermine the president, but that it is their duty, under the U.S. Constitution, to state their case when they disagree with presidential policies. However, some lawmakers cautioned that a divided government could harm U.S. foreign policies.

In his annual State of the Union address the evening of January 23, President Bush warned that “the consequences of failure [in Iraq] would be grievous and far reaching.” (See related article.)

The president, who is also commander in chief of the U.S. armed forces, is deploying an additional 21,500 troops to Iraq, where 137,000 Americans already are deployed. The goal of the “surge” plan is to place more U.S. troops in Baghdad, Iraq, and in al-Anbar province to support a bolstered Iraqi effort to decrease the level of violence in critical neighborhoods.

Immediately following the president’s address, the Democratic Party was allowed a televised response, delivered by newly elected Senator James Webb of Virginia, a Vietnam War veteran and former Pentagon official whose son is a Marine serving in Iraq.

Webb said that “this country has patiently endured a mismanaged war for nearly four years.” He invoked the legacy of Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower for the historic role they played -- Roosevelt as a social reformer and Eisenhower as a statesman.

“Tonight we are calling on the president to take similar action in both areas,” Webb said. “If he does, we will join him. If he does not, we will show him the way.”

On January 24, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved by a vote of 12-9 a nonbinding resolution that voices disagreement with sending additional forces to Iraq but does not prevent their deployment. Under the U.S. Constitution, laws passed by Congress must be signed by the president or else approved by a two-thirds majority of both chambers of Congress. A nonbinding resolution does not have the force of law, but does send a strong message on behalf of lawmakers.

The draft resolution says it is “not in the national interest of the United States to deepen its military involvement in Iraq, particularly by escalating the United States military force in Iraq.” To be approved, the resolution must still be voted on by the entire Senate. The committee rejected an alternative plan that would have capped U.S. troops in Iraq at their current levels.

“Our resolution of disapproval is not –- I emphasize not –- an attempt to embarrass the president,” said Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Joseph Biden. “[I]t’s an attempt to save the president from making a significant mistake with regard to our policy in Iraq.”

Senator Richard Lugar, the senior Republican on the committee, said he shares Biden’s concerns, but does not endorse the draft resolution. “I am not confident that President Bush’s plan will succeed,” Lugar said.

“However, I oppose this nonbinding resolution on the basis that it’s the wrong tool for this stage in the Iraq debate,” Lugar said. Because Bush already has said he will ignore the resolution and already is in the process of deploying additional troops, Lugar said it is “unclear to me how [the resolution] will contribute to any improvement or modification of our Iraq policy.”

Republican Senator John Warner of Virginia is drafting an alternate resolution that also disagrees with increased troop levels, but is aimed at gaining wider support in the Senate.

Warner, interviewed by the PBS television network on January 23, said that Bush, when making his Iraq plan public two weeks earlier, invited members of Congress to make recommendations.

“Our resolution is not a confrontational document,” Warner said. “We simply say, Mr. President, we disagree with that high level that you suggested, ... and, Mr. President, we urge you to go back and look at all the options whereby you can possibly employ fewer troops there.”

Warner noted that the U.S. government is not a European-style parliamentary system where the party or coalition with legislative majority determines who is prime minister. The U.S. system creates “co-equal branches of government,” Warner said.

“It’s our duty” to question presidential policy, Warner said, describing the constitutional role of Congress. “We’re a separate branch. We’re proud. I’ve been supportive of the president through these many years [and] decisions. But I think he’s been right in many instances. Where he hasn’t been right, I’ve spoken out on it.”

A transcript of the PBS interview is available on Warner’s Web site.

For more information on the U.S. government, see The U.S. Congress.

(USINFO is produced by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)

Noor T. Umarov 
Information Assistant 
U.S. Embassy 
109A 
Ismoili Somoni Ave.

Dushanbe, Tajikistan 
cell: (992-93) 570-70-38 
phone: (992-37) 229-23-58 
email: UmarovNT@state.gov



Visit the Gateway to:

Copyright (c) Tajikistan Development Gateway Team
common@tajik-gateway.org