'08 Candidates Weigh In On Troop Increase
Most Democratic Presidential Hopefuls Favor Reverse Of President's Plan
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Play CBS Video Video Sen. Durbin On New Iraq Plan The majority whip, Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., speaks with Harry Smith about the president's new plan for the war in Iraq. Many Democrats feel that adding more troops is not the solution.
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Video Congressional Skeptics On Iraq Democrats and some Republicans are skeptical about President Bush's new strategy for the War in Iraq, including a boost in the number of U.S. troops. Sharyl Atkisson reports.
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Video Bush Touts Plan To Soldiers CBS News RAW: President Bush spoke to soldiers at Fort Benning, Ga., the day after his speech to the nation in which he said he plans to increase troop levels in Iraq.
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(CBS/AP)
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Who's Who 2008 Democratic Hopefuls Clinton, Obama and Edwards lead the chase for the Democratic nomination.
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Who's Who 2008 Republican Hopefuls McCain and Giuliani head up the Republican pack chasing the presidency.
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In The Spotlight Bush's New Iraq Strategy A glimpse at some of the key elements in President Bush's new plan for Iraq.
John Edwards, the 2004 Democratic candidate for Vice President, and former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack have gone a step further, calling on Congress to block funding for a troop increase. But Vilsack said he is wary of holding back funds to try to force the return of troops already deployed in Iraq.
"I'm not willing to suggest we have a cutting off of funds that would really put people in greater danger than they are today," Vilsack told The Associated Press.
Two other Democrats with their eye on the Oval Office, Sens. Barack Obama of Illinois and Joe Biden of Delaware, have also said in media reports that congressional Democrats shouldn't cut off funding to force the president's hand on Iraq.
Edwards — who has labeled a troop increase the "McCain Doctrine" in a jab at Republican front-runner Sen. John McCain — said Congress "should make it clear to the president that he will not get any money to put more of our troops in harm's way until he provides a plan to turn responsibility of Iraq over to the Iraqi people and to ultimately leave Iraq."
The most cautious of the Democrats has been front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton, who has said she would not favor a proposed troop escalation in Iraq unless it was part of a broader political solution to stabilize the country and bring American forces home. But aides said she would reserve final judgment until she sees details of the president's plan.
Clinton, who tops every national poll of likely 2008 Democratic presidential contenders, has been criticized by many party activists for refusing to recant her 2002 vote authorizing military action in Iraq. Other Democratic hopefuls who supported the invasion — including Edwards, Biden and Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd — have all called the vote a mistake.
Dodd, who traveled to Iraq and Syria last month, wrote in a recent op-ed in The Des Moines Register that "searching for military solutions in Iraq today is a fool's errand."
In a break with the president, Republican Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., opposed a troop increase.
"I do not believe that sending more troops to Iraq is the answer. Iraq requires a political rather than a military solution," Brownback said after meeting with top Iraqi officials in Baghdad. "I came away from these meetings convinced that the United States should not increase its involvement until Sunnis and Shia are more willing to cooperate with each other instead of shooting at each other."
"Instead of surging troops, we must press the Iraqi government to reach a political solution," he said. "We cannot achieve a political solution while a military solution is imposed. The best way to reach a democratic Iraq is to empower the Iraqis to take responsibility for their own nation building."
McCain, R-Ariz., has said for years that more troops are needed in Iraq, but he's also sought to separate himself from Bush by qualifying that it's not enough just to increase troop strength — the size of the increase and how the increase is implemented are also important.
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani said he supported the troop increase but insisted on a regular measurement of whether the new strategy was working.
Another GOP contender, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, also lined up behind a troop increase this week, saying he would add five brigades in Baghdad and two regiments in Al-Anbar province.
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Michelle Obama tells how her role as the First Lady has changed her perspective.





fascistUSA: It may be more appropriate to say, because you may say voting is corrupt, the people's voice still influences government. The president is limited in the number of terms he can run for.
I would vote for either McCain or Lieberman if he ran, if these two or maybe a few others didn't win the nomination, I won't vote.
If there was this great fascist conspiracy, don't you think the conservative republicans would be in majority in congress, would congress be calling for a (suicidal) withdrawl from Iraq-your so-called "oli wars"? I wouldn't think so.
But I scincerely hope that the next US president will bring integrety, honnesty, stability... to America and the rest of the World.
For our children and their future
I think it's great that the GOP candidates are steaking their political future on a man who has none.
IRAN IS HIS KIND OF DEMOCRACY - THEY TOLERATE EXCREMENT-FILLED CLOWNS LIKE HIM, BECAUSE, WELL, THEY'RE JUST THE SAME AS HE-SHE IS.
A JOKE. A SMELLY OLD NAZI CLOWN. HA HA HA.
OIL WARS II: THE NEW WORLD ORDER
WE ARE NO LONGER A DEMOCRACY.
STOP BUYING JUNK YOU DON'T NEED.
STOP WATCHING TELEVISION.
MASS PROTESTS IS THE FUTURE. REVOLUTION. REVOLT.