The political war over the Obama administration's response to the
growing Iraq crisis heated up on Thursday, as Republican lawmakers took
to the Senate floor to blast President Obama's foreign policy in the
Middle East and urge a new approach.
Meanwhile, the president was meeting with his national security team
and planned to make a statement at the White House at 12:30 p.m. ET.
"These recent events ... are not intelligence failures. They are
policy and leadership failures," Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., said on
the floor, claiming the president's Middle East policy has "totally
unraveled."
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., blamed the decision to withdraw entirely from Iraq for the current quagmire.
"You've seen a collapse of the Iraqi Army that I think could have been prevented," Graham said.
The back-to-back string of speeches on the floor were the latest show
of pressure from congressional lawmakers aimed at getting the
administration, broadly, to reconsider its foreign policies and,
specifically, to get more involved in protecting the Baghdad government
from Sunni Muslim militants sweeping across the country's north.
The president met Wednesday afternoon in the Oval Office with the top
four congressional leaders, but apparently did not announce any
decisions for the way forward in Iraq. He is said to be weighing various
options, including sending special forces into Iraq to help the
government. He reportedly is leaning away from the possibility of
airstrikes, but officials say no options have been taken off the table.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, Secretary of State John Kerry and other officials were set to meet with Obama on Thursday.
In the strongest sign yet of U.S. doubts about Iraq's stability, the
Obama administration also is weighing whether to press the Shiite prime
minister in Baghdad to step down in a last-ditch effort to prevent
disgruntled Sunnis from igniting a civil war.
More so than airstrikes or other American military action, top U.S.
officials believe that giving more credence to Sunni concerns about
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki can stave off another deadly round of
sectarian fighting of the kind that engulfed Iraq less than a decade
ago.
It is unclear whether Obama or other administration officials would
publicly call for al-Maliki to resign. U.S. officials said there is
concern within the administration that pushing al-Maliki too hard might
stiffen his resolve to stay in office and drive him closer to Iran,
which is seeking to keep the Shiite leader in power.
However, officials said, the administration does want to see evidence
of a leadership transition plan being put in place in Iraq.
Vice President Joe Biden spoke with the Iraqi leader Wednesday and
emphasized the need for him to govern in an inclusive manner. Biden also
spoke to Iraq's Sunni parliamentary speaker and the president of Iraq's
self-ruled northern Kurdish region.
Al-Maliki, who has long faced criticism for not making his government
more inclusive, went on a diplomatic offensive Wednesday, reaching out
in a televised address to try to regain support from the nation's
disaffected Sunnis and Kurds. His conciliatory words, coupled with a vow
to teach the militants a "lesson," came as almost all Iraq's main
communities have been drawn into a spasm of violence not seen since the
dark days of sectarian killings nearly a decade ago.
Iraq's government, though, has asked the U.S. to launch airstrikes to
contain the fast-moving militant group that has seized Mosul, Tikrit
and other towns in Iraq as the country's military melted away. U.S.
officials say Obama has been weighing that request, but strikes have not
been the focus of his deliberations.
Obama's decision-making on airstrikes has been complicated by
intelligence gaps that resulted from the U.S. military withdrawal from
Iraq in late 2011, which left the country largely off-limits to American
operatives. Intelligence agencies are now trying to close gaps and
identify possible targets that include insurgent encampments, training
camps, weapons caches and other stationary supplies, according to U.S.
officials.
Source: Foxnews
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