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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE October 4, 2007 |
Contacts: Stephanie Valencia (Salazar) 202-224-5852 Lee Pitts (Alexander) 202-224-4944 Lisa Ackerman (Pryor) 202-224-2353 Jen Burita (Collins) 202-224-2523 Clinton Press Office (202) 224-2243 Garrette Silverman (Voinovich) 202-224-3353 Katie Hallaway (Dole) 202-224-6342
Jessica Smith (Webb) 202-228-5185 |
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The bill is identical to bipartisan legislation authored by U.S. Representatives John Tanner (D-TN), Neil Abercrombie (D-HI), and Phil English, (R-PA) that passed the House this week in a 377 to 46 vote. “We must all work together to find a new way forward in Iraq and this bill is an important first step,” said Senator Salazar. “This is a substantive and bipartisan effort to work together to bring a responsible and timely redeployment of our troops. The men and women that are fighting this war in our name deserve no less.” “Both this bill and our Iraq Study Group legislation ask the administration for a plan on how to shift gears and get our troops out of the combat business and into the support, training, and equipping business,” said Senator Alexander. “Both bills also allow our government to speak with one voice going forward in Iraq – which our troops deserve and the enemy needs to hear.” “I have been asking the President for more than four years to develop a strategy to bring our troops home.” Senator Pryor said. “I am proud to be part of this bipartisan approach that finds common ground and moves Congress past partisanship and towards progress.” “The vitriolic partisan debate in Washington has not been conducive to finding a solution that will change the course in Iraq,” said Senator Collins. “I have long maintained that our country needs a new direction in Iraq that sets the stage for a significant but responsible drawdown of our combat troops and that encourages a lasting political solution to the sectarian violence engulfing Baghdad. I am pleased to join this bipartisan group of my colleagues on this legislation, and it is my hope that this bill will continue to gain bipartisan support.” "The roots of the many problems facing our men and women serving in Iraq were planted by the failure of this Administration to develop sound, realistic plans. We cannot afford to repeat the same mistake when our forces redeploy," said Senator Clinton. "Redeploying out of Iraq will be difficult and requires careful planning. The Administration must provide a redeployment strategy that will keep our brave men and women safe as they leave Iraq." “Conducting oversight of the government, the administration and the war is not only our responsibility – it is our duty,” Senator Voinovich said. “This bill allows us to fulfill that duty.” “I firmly believe that we must find common ground on a set of shared principles and work to bring our troops home as soon as possible, consistent with the security assessment of General Petraeus,” said Senator Dole. “This bipartisan measure is a positive step forward. The American people and the Iraqi government need to know that that our commitment in Iraq is not open ended. It is my hope that by next spring, units not withdrawn from Iraq could be reassigned to border security, training and support roles.” “I’m pleased to support this renewed bipartisan call for the Department of Defense to meet its Constitutional requirement of conferring with Congress on the status of its redeployment planning,” said Senator Webb. The bill would require the Secretary of Defense to provide a plan to Congress on troop missions and levels in Iraq, including a drawdown to a more limited mission that the Secretary would specify. The Senators said the bill ensures more Congressional oversight of our strategy in Iraq and it represents a bipartisan approach toward greater accountability over the Pentagon’s next steps. The legislation also:
Should the Senate consider and pass this legislation without making further changes, it would proceed to the White House for the President’s signature or veto. # # # |
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