 
Retired US Iraq
commander speaks out
for Democrats
By Randall Mikkelsen,
from the Web, November 26, 2007
WASHINGTON, Nov 24 -- The
general who led U.S. forces in Iraq after the invasion launched by Republican
President George W. Bush spoke out for Democrats on Saturday, backing
legislation aimed at withdrawing American troops.
Retired Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, in the Democratic weekly radio address,
acknowledged that Bush's escalation strategy this year had improved security in
Iraq. But he said Iraqi political leaders had failed to make "hard choices
necessary to bring peace to their country."
"There is no evidence that the Iraqis will choose to do so in the near future or
that we have an ability to force that result," said Sanchez, an increasingly
vocal critic of what he called Bush administration policy failures in Iraq.
He endorsed the latest attempt by Democrats in the House of Representatives to
use Iraq-war funding legislation to push for a reduction of U.S. troops.
The House passed a measure last week that would have set a goal of withdrawing
all U.S. combat troops from Iraq by Dec. 15, 2008, but Republicans in the Senate
blocked it.
Such attempts have regularly failed to overcome Bush's opposition and a
reduction in violence in recent months has eased some of the political pressure
on the White House for a change in strategy.
But Sanchez urged a rapid cut in the U.S. military presence by shifting the
troops' main mission away from combat, and he said the House measure "makes the
proper preparation" for a troop reduction.
"It is well past time to adopt a new approach in Iraq that will improve chances
to produce stability in the Middle East," he said. "I urge our political
leaders to put aside partisan considerations and unite to lessen the burden our
troops and their families have been under for nearly five years."
The Pentagon said Iraq strategy should be guided by current commanders there.
Spokesman Bryan Whitman, asked about Sanchez's remarks, said, "I think our
military commanders that are on the ground in Iraq today are in the best
position to make recommendations to the nation's leadership about the progress
that's being made and the best strategy to embark upon."
Sanchez commanded the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq from June 2003 until July 2004
as the anti-U.S. insurgency took hold. He retired in 2006 and blamed the
Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal for wrecking his career.
Last month Sanchez blamed the Bush administration for a "catastrophic failure"
in leadership of the war, saying it had left the United States mired in Iraq
with no clear way out.
He said in the radio address that it would take at least a decade for the U.S.
Army to recover from the war's degradation to military readiness.
Sanchez also endorsed a provision in the House legislation that would have
required all U.S. government employees -- such as CIA agents -- to abide by the
U.S. Army's field manual on interrogations.
The manual bans internationally condemned interrogation techniques such as "waterboarding,"
or simulated drowning, which the CIA is believed to have used on at least three
terrorism suspects since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.
(Editing by David
Alexander and Bill Trott)
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