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More U.S. Troops To Iraq By End Of Month

A first wave of additional U.S. troops will go into Iraq before the end of the month under President Bush's new plan, a senior defense official said Tuesday.

Up to 20,000 troops will be put on alert and be prepared to deploy under the president's plan, but the increase in forces on the ground will be gradual, said the official, who requested anonymity because the plans have not yet been announced.

Moving first would be the 2nd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, which is in Kuwait and poised to move quickly into Iraq.

Roughly 11,000 troops will deploy almost immediately and another 11,000 will be phased in over the next few months, reports CBS News chief White House correspondent Jim Axelrod. But that second wave, according to one member of Congress, would be a carrot. In other words, the president won't promise the second wave unless the Iraqis become more effective partners in making Baghdad safer.

Details of the plan were emerging a day before Bush was to address the nation on his broad initiative to shore up the fragile country. They came as members of Congress kept up vocal opposition to any major escalation in the nearly 4-year-old war.

Carl Levin, a Michigan Democrat who chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he expects Bush to announce that up to 20,000 additional troops will be sent to Iraq — but not to say how long the extra forces will be there.

Levin, who spoke to reporters a day after meeting with White House national security adviser Stephen Hadley, said he believes Bush will signal that the overall U.S. commitment in Iraq is not open-ended.

Bush is expected to link the troop increase to promised moves by the Iraqi government such as curbing Shiite militias that have terrorized the Sunni minority, enacting a plan to distribute oil revenue to the country's sects and easing government restrictions on members of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's Baath Party.

There are currently about 132,000 U.S. troops in Iraq. Much of the increase would come from speeding up the timetable for sending some forces already scheduled to go to the country, and keeping others there who were about to leave.

The extra forces would be sent to Baghdad, which has been consumed by sectarian violence, and the western Anbar Province, a base of the mostly Sunni insurgency and foreign al Qaeda fighters, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, and others said following a White House session with Bush.

A day before Bush's nationally televised speech, Sen. Edward Kennedy, a longtime critic, said he would propose legislation that would deny the president the billions needed to send more troops unless Congress agreed first. Though it was unclear whether the bill would ever reach the full Senate, it could serve as a rallying point for the most strident foes of the Iraq conflict.

White House press secretary Tony Snow said the president was still listening to ideas from lawmakers.

"What I'm saying is the president still continues to have an open mind because this is a way forward. This is not, 'Wave a wand and it's going to happen,"' Snow said.

He conceded that Bush has a challenge in persuading a war-weary public.

"The president will not shape policy according to public opinion, but he does understand that it's important to bring the public back to this war and restore public confidence and support for the mission," Snow said.

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