April 3, 2009 10:18 AM

Bush: 'Not Going To Pull Our Troops'

(CBS/AP)  Under intense pressure to change course, President Bush on Tuesday rejected suggestions that Iraq has fallen into civil war and vowed not to pull U.S. troops out "until the mission is complete."

At the opening of a NATO summit, Mr. Bush also urged allies to increase their forces in Afghanistan to confront a strengthening Taliban insurgency.

On the eve of his visit to Jordan for meetings with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, Mr. Bush portrayed the battles in both Afghanistan and Iraq as central fronts in a war "against the extremists who desire safe havens and are willing to kill innocents anywhere to achieve their objectives."

The stakes in Iraq are huge for President Bush. His war policies were repudiated in U.S. midterm elections that handed control of Congress to Democrats. A bipartisan blue-ribbon panel is about to issue a report proposing changes in the administration's approach in Iraq. And al-Maliki's government itself sometimes seems to be at cross purposes with Washington.

Mr. Bush set the stage for the Jordan talks with a speech at the NATO summit here and at an earlier news conference in neighboring Estonia. The president said he was flexible and eager to hear al-Maliki's ideas on how to ease the violence.

"There's one thing I'm not going to do, I'm not going to pull our troops off the battlefield before the mission is complete," President Bush declared in his speech. There are about 140,000 U.S. forces in Iraq.

Meanwhile, the U.N. Security Council voted unanimously to extend the mandate of the 160,000-strong multinational force in Iraq for one year, acting quickly ahead of a key meeting between U.S. and Iraqi leaders aimed at halting escalating violence in the country and paving the way for a reduction of American troops.

The council responded to a request from al-Maliki, who said a top government priority is to assume full responsibility for security and stability throughout the country but that it needs more time.

Earlier, speaking with reporters in Tallinn during a joint news conference with Estonia's president, Mr. Bush would not debate whether Iraq had fallen into civil war and blamed the increasing bloodshed on a pattern of sectarian violence that he said was set in motion last winter by al Qaeda followers.

"I'm going to bring this subject up, of course, with Prime Minister Maliki," Mr. Bush said. "My questions to him will be: What do you need to do to succeed? What is your strategy in dealing with the sectarian violence?"

But senior administration officials say that when Mr. Bush sits down with al-Maliki tomorrow, it is al-Maliki who might push for troop withdrawals so Iraqis can take greater control of their own security, CBS News chief White House correspondent Jim Axelrod reports.

The president said he realized that "no question it's dangerous there, and violent. And the Maliki government is going to have to deal with that violence, and we want to help them do so."

Mr. Bush has been coming under increasing pressure, both overseas and at home, to reach out more to other countries.

Such a recommendation may be among those issued by the Iraq Study Group headed by former Secretary of State James A. Baker III and former Democratic Rep. Lee Hamilton. The group is expected to finish its work next month, and some are hoping for it by early next week. The Bush administration rejected what is expected to be a key recommendation — engaging Iran and Syria for help calming Iraq, Axelrod reports.

CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reports that sources close to the Iraq Study Group predicted that its final report will not call for a timetable for a withdrawal of troops — something that would certainly be rejected by the administration.



© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by consciousnes December 1, 2006 4:56 PM EST
When are people going to stop being afraid of insulting someone who is killing our troops? Why doesn't the Iraqi Priminester allow the removal of one of the major roadblocks to a peacful government by removing the one man who is supporting so much violence? If that were done, people would understand that there ARE consenquences to the use of violence to obtain an objective.
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by pendragon679 November 29, 2006 6:12 PM EST
"I'm not going to pull our troops off the battlefield before the mission is complete,. . ."

Once again, King Dubya decides to "stay the course." Maybe he needs a new Viagra prescription.

Pull out? Doesn't sound manly to me!
Reply to this comment
by vamecegr November 29, 2006 11:30 AM EST
F the Memo and the memo's signatory

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by dacheetah99 November 29, 2006 7:18 AM EST
Found an interesting article in the BBC's Int'l section... apparently Bush didn't get the memo...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6190662.stm
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by feelfree1 November 29, 2006 4:24 AM EST
arthurcl1,

Our national debt is approaching $9 trillion

http://www.uwsa.com/uwsa-usdebt.html

Long term cost estimates of the U.S. debacle in Iraq have exceeded an additional $2 trillion, alone!

Not to mention all of the pointlessly spilled American blood and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis.

God help America...
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by arthurcl1 November 29, 2006 4:12 AM EST
But look at what Bush has done for us, like spending billions on a failed policy in Irag. Going over the UN to go it alone! Will not seek help from neighboring countries. Worst Foreign Policy of all time. Recently millions of dollars of our taxpayer money for weapons for their armed forces was ripped off from under our noses? They will probably be used against our troops with their Kamakaize tactics! No reconstruction going on for the people, civil war, and the Cleric is back to controlling Sadar City? They told us to get out and leave behind one of our solders they kidnapped! Last month alone another 100 brave men lost their lives! Our National Debt is at 4 TRILLION! Left for our grandchildren to try to pay? What a mess Bush has us in. It's another Vietnam. Bush has No Exit Strategy thanks for Cheyne and Rumsfield! We will never be able to get out of there thanks to these guys!
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by feelfree1 November 29, 2006 3:32 AM EST
fascistusa, at 12:19 AM : Nov 29, 2006

Hear, hear!!!

Did you hear the latest about how Mexico is coping with their fraudulant Corporate-puppet?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6194100.stm

I think that we could learn a lot from our southern neighbors.

Salute!
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by marcelde November 29, 2006 3:30 AM EST
Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE! Stay the CURSE!
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by firststate November 29, 2006 3:30 AM EST
To the all the remaining Bush-Cheney fans, before you start ragging on Clinton, please remember,

"WHEN CLINTON LIED, NO ONE DIED"

If only Bush had committed adultery instead of his "high crimes and misdemeanors." Do war crimes count?
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by alphaa10-2009 November 29, 2006 3:28 AM EST
Bush's RearGuard Exit from Iraq
This presidential "whirlwind" tour was crafted frantically to limit collateral damage from an awakening American public, angry that we are screwed to the wall with a hugely expensive foreign war, utter dependence on MidEast oil, and head over heels in debt to policies serving Bush's bosom buddies. And last, but not least-- gasp!-- the stunned realization all these Eye-Rackis may have been right, after all, about American oil lust driving the invasion, in the first place. To keep his domestic public relations show on the road, Bush is compelled to sound convincingly like a statesman at each stop.

His whirlwind tour pointedly starts with Estonia, and less pointedly stops in Baghdad. Hat in hand, Bush must approach the man he regarded with mild contempt just months ago to offer his hand of support. In harsh political fact, however, Bush is now the weaker of the two,. and both know Bush will need a steadying hand for himself back in Washington. As he meets al-Maliki, PM of Iraq, Bush understands al-Maliki has many more options than he, and can play them all with a bemused smile.
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