Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
Voice of America is funded by the US Federal Government and content it
exclusively produces is in the public domain.

Top US Congressional Democrats Urge Bush Not to Send More Troops to
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Iraq
----

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=15A80DF:A6F02AD83191E16080A8708056BB2A149574F7DCC14957C0 Nancy Pelosi and
Harry Reid say more combat troops in Iraq would only endanger more
Americans and stretch US military to breaking point for no strategic
gain The top leaders of the new Democratic-led U.S. Congress are
urging President Bush not to increase the number of U.S. troops in
Iraq. Their comments, in a letter to the president Friday, come as Mr.
Bush is preparing to announce an overhaul of his Iraq strategy next
week that could include a short-term surge in troop strength. VOA's
Deborah Tate reports from Capitol Hill.







Nancy Pelosi, 5 Jan 2007In their letter to President Bush, the top
Democrat in the House of Representatives, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and
the top Democrat in the Senate, Majority Leader Harry Reid, wrote that
adding more combat troops in Iraq would only endanger more Americans
and stretch the U.S. military to the breaking point for no strategic
gain.

News reports say President Bush may call for a temporary increase of
some 20,000 troops when he addresses the nation next week.

Pelosi and Reid urged the president to begin withdrawing troops from
Iraq in four to six months, and shift the mission of U.S. forces there
from combat to training and logistical support.







Harry Reid, 5 Jan 2007Senator Reid offered similar comments on the
Senate floor Thursday. He said, "The president's new plan must ensure
that Iraq takes responsibility for their own future, and remove our
troops from this civil war."

Another key Senate Democrat, Senator Joe Biden, chairman of the
Foreign Relations Committee, also opposes a short-term increase in
U.S. troops in Iraq.

In an interview published in the Washington Post Friday, Biden says he
believes top officials in the Bush administration have privately
concluded they have lost Iraq and are simply trying to postpone
disaster so the next president - in his words - will be the one
landing helicopters inside the Green Zone, taking people off the roof
- in a chaotic withdrawal reminiscent of the U.S. pullout from the
Vietnam War.

But Senator John McCain, a Republican member of the Armed Services
Committee and himself a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War, took
issue with Biden's comments.







Sen. John McCain  (14 Dec 2006)"I believe that the war is still
winnable," he said. "But to prevail, we will need to do everything
right and the Iraqis will have to do their part."

McCain, who is expected to seek the Republican nomination for
president next year, made his comments at a forum in Washington. He
has long called for increasing U.S. troops in Iraq.

"The presence of additional coalition forces would give the Iraqi
government the ability to do what it can not accomplish today on its
own: impose its rule throughout the country," said McCain.

Echoing McCain's comments at the same forum was Senator Joe Lieberman,
who abandoned his Democratic Party affiliation to become an
Independent during his tough reelection bid last year.

He said, "We need to restore security to open the possibility for
Iraqi politics and economy to take off."

Key House and Senate Committees are planning a series of hearings on
the Iraq war beginning next week. Defense Secretary Robert Gates and
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Peter Pace, are
expected to testify on Capitol Hill after President Bush delivers his
speech to the nation.