Obama says Iraq trip could refine his policy
FARGO, N.D. (AP) - July 3, 2008 A dustup over war policy - one of the main issues separating the
Illinois senator from his Republican opponent, John McCain -
overshadowed Obama's town-hall meeting here with veterans to talk
about patriotism and his plans to care for them. Republicans
pounced on the chance to characterize Obama as altering one of the
core policies that drove his candidacy "for the sake of political
expedience." He denied equally forcefully that he was shifting
positions.
Arriving in Fargo, Obama hastily called a news conference to
discuss news of a sixth straight month of nationwide job losses,
but the questioning turned to Iraq policy and his impending trip
there.
"I am going to do a thorough assessment when I'm there," he
said. "I'm sure I'll have more information and continue to refine
my policy."
He left the impression that his talks with military commanders
there could refine his promise to remove U.S. combat troops within
16 months of taking office.
Less than four hours later, after the town hall meeting, Obama
appeared before reporters for another statement and round of
questions to "try this again."
"Apparently I was not clear enough this morning," he said. He
blamed any confusion on the McCain campaign, which he said had
"primed the pump with the press" to suggest "we were changing
our policy when we haven't."
"I have said throughout this campaign that this war was
ill-conceived, that it was a strategic blunder and that it needs to
come to an end," he said. "I have also said I would be deliberate
and careful about how we get out. That position has not changed. I
am not searching for maneuvering room with respect to that
position."
He promised to summon the Joint Chiefs of Staff on his first day
in office "and I will give them a new mission and that is to end
this war, responsibly and deliberately, but decisively."
He said that when he talked earlier about refining his policy
after talking with commanders in Iraq, he was referring not to his
16-month timeline, but to how many troops may need to remain in
Iraq to train the local army and police and what troop presence
might be needed "`to be sure al-Qaida doesn't re-establish a
foothold there."
"I will bring our troops out at a pace of one two brigades a
month" which would mean the United States would be totally out of
Iraq in 16 months. "That is what I intend to do as president of
the United States."
But later in the session, he said it is possible the 16-month
timeline could slip if the pace of withdrawal needs to be slowed
some months to ensure troop safety. "I have always said ... I
would always reserve the right to do what's best," Obama said.
During his presidential campaign, Obama has gone from the
hard-edged, vocal opposition to Iraq that defined his early
candidacy to more nuanced rhetoric that calls for the phased-out
drawdown of all combat brigades that, at a rate of one or two a
month, could take 16 months. He has said that if al-Qaida builds
bases in Iraq, he would keep troops either in the country or the
region to carry out "targeted strikes."
Republicans, who have claimed Obama needs an update on the
situation in Iraq, e-mailed a midday broadside.
"There appears to be no issue that Barack Obama is not willing
to reverse himself on for the sake of political expedience," said
Alex Conant, a spokesman for the national Republican Party.
"Obama's Iraq problem undermines the central premise of his
candidacy and shows him to be a typical politician."
McCain, has been a vocal supporter of the Iraq war and war
policy has been a central disagreement between the two candidates.
But Obama insisted his position has not changed at all. He
pointed out he has always said, "We need to be as careful getting
out as we were careless getting in." This means, he said, that his
16-month timeline "was always premised on" not endangering either
U.S. troops or Iraq's stability, which he had previously been told
by commanders was possible.
"I'm going to continue to gather information to see whether
those conditions still hold," he said. "My goal is to end this
conflict as soon as possible."
"I continue to believe that it is a strategic error for us to
maintain a long-term occupation in Iraq at a time when conditions
in Afghanistan are worsening, al-Qaida is continuing to establish
bases in areas of northwest Pakistan, resources there are severely
strained and we are spending $10 to $12 billion a month in Iraq
that we desperately need here at home, not to mention the strains
on our military," Obama said.
Obama plans a visit this summer to Jordan, Israel, Germany,
France and the United Kingdom. The Illinois senator also has said
he intends to visit Iraq and Afghanistan this summer as part of an
official congressional trip that would be separate from the
campaign-funded Mideast and European tour. It would be his second
trip to Iraq.
Obama's Web site contains this direct promise about Iraq:
"Obama will immediately begin to remove our troops from Iraq. He
will remove one to two combat brigades each month, and have all of
our combat brigades out of Iraq within 16 months. Obama will make
it clear that we will not build any permanent bases in Iraq. He
will keep some troops in Iraq to protect our embassy and diplomats;
if al-Qaida attempts to build a base within Iraq, he will keep
troops in Iraq or elsewhere in the region to carry out targeted
strikes on al-Qaida."
McCain was an early supporter of increasing the number of U.S.
troops in Iraq as President Bush did last year. He wants to pursue
the current counterinsurgency tactics to give Iraqis time to work
out a political reconciliation. He has said he's willing to see
some U.S. troops stay there as much as 100 years but not if they
are being wounded or killed in combat. Rather he supports keeping a
military presence in that part of the world because of its
volatility.