WASHINGTON (By
William Branigin, Washington Post) March 23, 2007
—
The House of
Representatives today passed a $124 billion emergency spending
bill that sets binding benchmarks for progress in Iraq,
establishes tough readiness standards for deploying U.S. troops
abroad and requires the withdrawal of American combat forces
from Iraq by the end of August 2008.
The bill promptly drew a veto threat
from President Bush.
After four hours of floor debate
yesterday and today, the House approved the bill by a vote of
218 to 212. One lawmaker voted present and three did not vote.
In a brief but sharply worded speech at
the White House with several uniformed service members, veterans
and their families standing behind him, Bush said House
Democrats had engaged in "an act of political theater" and
"voted to substitute their judgment for that of our military
commanders on the ground in Iraq."
Saying that the bill contains "too much
pork" and includes restrictions "that would require an army of
lawyers to interpret," Bush vowed, "I will veto it if it comes
to my desk." He expressed confidence that his veto would be
sustained, pointing to the closeness of the vote.
The bill to fund the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan represents a major challenge to Bush, who opposes
any mandates or timetables for the withdrawal of U.S. forces
from Iraq.
It marks the first time that the House,
which shifted to Democratic control as a result of last year's
midterm elections, has set a firm deadline for pulling U.S.
combat troops out of Iraq after four years of an increasingly
unpopular war that has left more than 3,200 Americans dead and
24,000 wounded.
The vote came a day after a Senate
committee passed a spending bill that sets a goal of bringing
troops home from Iraq within a year.
In a largely party-line vote, 216
Democrats were joined by two Republicans in supporting the bill,
while 198 Republicans and 14 Democrats opposed it. Voting with
the Democratic majority were Republicans Walter B. Jones of
North Carolina and Wayne T. Gilchrest of Maryland. Rep. Pete
Stark (D-Calif.) voted present. Reps. Jo Ann Davis (R-Va.), Paul
E. Kanjorski (D-Pa.) and Melvin Watt (D-N.C.) did not vote.
Among the Democrats who opposed the bill
were conservatives reluctant to set a timetable for U.S.
withdrawal from Iraq and liberals who want the troops out
immediately. The 14 Democrats who voted no were: John Barrow
(Ga.), Dan Boren (Okla.), Lincoln Davis (Tenn.), Dennis J.
Kucinich (Ohio), Barbara Lee (Calif.), John Lewis (Ga.), Gene
Taylor (Miss.), Jim Marshall (Ga.), Jim Matheson (Utah), Michael
R. McNulty (N.Y.), Michael H. Michaud (Maine), Maxine Waters
(Calif.), Diane Watson (Calif.) and Lynn Woolsey (Calif.).
In two hours of debate before the vote
today, Republicans assailed the inclusion of spending for what
they called pork-barrel projects in the bill, charging that the
Democrats were buying votes with sweeteners of special interest
to individual lawmakers. Republicans also denounced the bill as
an effort to "micromanage" the war in Iraq and said it would
guarantee the failure of the U.S. military mission there.
Democrats argued that Congress has the
obligation to bring to a close what they called a "war without
end" that never should have been waged in the first place. They
said the bill in part is aimed at refocusing the U.S. military
on what they described as the "real war on terrorism" in
Afghanistan against resurgent Taliban and al-Qaeda extremists.
The House bill includes military funding
beyond the level requested by Bush, adding money for health care
for returning service members and veterans in the wake of a
scandal over the treatment of wounded outpatient soldiers at
Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
Dubbed the U.S. Troop Readiness,
Veterans' Health and Iraq Accountability Act, the bill requires
the Pentagon to stick to its standards for training and
equipping combat troops being sent abroad. It enforces rules
that limit the tours of deployed troops to no more than 13
months and stipulate that they have to stay home for at least a
year between tours.
In his response to the House passage of
the bill, Bush said a "narrow majority" in the chamber had
"abdicated its responsibility by passing a war spending bill
that has no chance of becoming law and brings us no closer to
getting our troops the resources they need to do their job."
Instead of providing the "vital funding"
he had requested, House Democrats "set rigid restrictions that
will require an army of lawyers to interpret," Bush said. "They
set an arbitrary date for withdrawal without regard for
conditions on the ground. And they tacked on billions for pet
projects that have nothing to do with winning the war on
terror."
Bush added, "This bill has too much
pork, too many conditions, and an artificial timetable for
withdrawal. As I've made clear for weeks, I will veto it if it
comes to my desk."
He said the House action "does only
one thing: It delays the delivery of
vital resources for our troops." He
asserted that "we're beginning to see
some signs of progress" in Iraq, where
U.S. troops are engaged in a plan to
secure Baghdad from rampant sectarian
violence.
"Yet to score political points, the Democratic majority in
the House has shown it is willing to undermine the gains our
troops are making on the ground," Bush said. "These Democrats
believe that the longer they can delay funding for our troops,
the more likely they are to force me to accept restrictions on
our commanders, an artificial timetable for withdrawal, and
their pet spending projects. This is not going to happen."
He said Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates has warned that if
Congress does not approve the supplemental spending bill by
April 15, service members "will face significant disruptions,
and so will their families."
Calling the war in Iraq "a grotesque mistake," House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said in a floor speech before the vote,
"The American people have lost faith in the president's conduct
of this war."
She added, "The American people see the reality of the war;
the president does not."
Pelosi urged lawmakers to take the "historic opportunity to
vote to end the war in Iraq," which she asserted is "separate"
from the war on terrorism.
"Will we renew the president's blank check for an open-ended
war without end, or will we take a giant step to end the war and
responsibly redeploy our troops out of Iraq?" she asked. "The
American people do not support a war without end, and neither
should this Congress."
Rep. Sam Johnson (R-Tex.), a former prisoner of war in
Vietnam who concluded the debate for the GOP side, said it was
"exasperating that the Democrats have turned an emergency
spending bill into a pork barrel project giveaway." He accused
Democrats of "trying to buy the majority vote today, one pork
project at a time."
"We all want our troops to come home -- when the job is
done," Johnson said on the House floor. Announcing a timeline
for withdrawal from Iraq "literally hands the enemy our war
plan" and tells them they will win "if they just wait us out,"
he said.
"The sweeteners in this bill are political bribery, and our
troops deserve more than this," Johnson said.
Other Republicans also charged that the bill violates recent
legislation restricting the use of "earmarks," as special
appropriations for lawmakers' pet projects are known. Democrats
defended the non-military spending in the bill and denied that
any of it represented earmarks, arguing that none of the
projects in question was requested by an individual lawmaker.
Kucinich, one of the liberal Democrats who opposed the bill,
said in a floor speech, "This war now has a momentum of its
own." He charged that "the same false logic that trapped members
into voting for the war is trapping members into continuing it."
He exhorted lawmakers, "If you want peace, vote for peace now.
If you want peace, stop funding the war."
Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), a supporter of the bill, said,
"The American people recognize President Bush's approach in Iraq
for what it is: a failure." But instead of heeding public
opinion against greater U.S. involvement, "the president in all
of his arrogance and all of his lying chose a surge," Miller
said, referring to Bush's plan to deploy about 30,000 additional
combat and support troops to Iraq.
That brought an admonition from the chair to refrain from
personally insulting the president.
"All of us whish that Iraq had gone better; we all wish that
the mistakes hadn't been made," said Rep. John A. Boehner
R-Ohio), the House minority leader. But he warned that the
Democrats' path would lead to "chaos and genocide in Iraq," as
well as the establishment of safe havens for terrorists there,
the destabilization of moderate Arab governments and "the end of
Israel as I know it."
The bill provides about $95.5 billion for the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan, as well as more than $20 billion in new
domestic spending for such items as agricultural subsidies,
veterans' health care and rebuilding efforts in Gulf Coast
states hit by hurricanes two years ago.
Among other things, it provides about $3.5 billion in
additional funding above Bush's request to address the health
care problems faced by veterans and by returning service members
wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan.
To help deal with an expected spring offensive by the Taliban
in Afghanistan, the bill adds $1.2 billion to Bush's funding
request for military operations in that country.
But it also includes such expenditures as $1.3 billion to
build levees in New Orleans, $500 million for wildfire
suppression, $250 million for milk subsidies, $120 million for
shrimp and menhaden fishermen, $75 million for peanut storage in
Georgia and $25 million for spinach farmers in California.
Republicans ridiculed some of these spending items, saying
they did not belong in the bill and were included to entice
reluctant lawmakers to vote for it.
Rep. David R. Obey (D-Wis.) defended the expenditures,
denouncing those he said were "squawking" about such items as
the spinach spending. "You can laugh about it now," he said,
"but people were dying last year because of an E. coli
breakout."
At the heart of the bill is a Democratic plan to withdraw
U.S. combat troops from Iraq. It requires Bush to hold the Iraqi
government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to political,
economic and military benchmarks that Bush himself has set in
calling for progress toward national reconciliation. While
setting out steps he expects the Iraqi government to take, Bush
has steadfastly refused to set any sort of a timetable or to
spell out penalties for failing to meet the commitments.
Under the plan, Bush must certify by July 1 that there is
progress in meeting the benchmarks. If such certification is not
submitted, the proposed legislation calls for the United States
to then begin withdrawing its troops from Iraq on a six-month
timetable.
If Bush provides the initial certification, he must
subsequently certify by Oct. 1 that the Iraqis have finished
meeting the benchmarks. If the second certification is not
forthcoming, a 180-day withdrawal period would start, with
completion of it set for the end of March 2008.
Regardless of whether the Iraqis meet the benchmarks, the
United States must start withdrawing combat troops from Iraq by
March 1, 2008, and complete the process by Aug. 31, 2008,
according to the plan.