White House Postponing Loss
of Iraq, Biden Says
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
01/05/07 "Washington
Post" -- - Sen. Joseph R. Biden
Jr. (D-Del.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, said yesterday that 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 will "be the guy landing
helicopters inside the Green Zone, taking people off the
roof," in a chaotic withdrawal reminiscent of Vietnam.
"I have reached the tentative conclusion that a
significant portion of this administration, maybe even
including the vice president, believes Iraq is lost,"
Biden said. "They have no answer to deal with how badly
they have screwed it up. I am not being facetious now.
Therefore, the best thing to do is keep it from totally
collapsing on your watch and hand it off to the next guy
-- literally, not figuratively."
Biden gave the comments in an interview as he outlined
an ambitious agenda for the committee, including holding
four weeks of hearings focused on every aspect of U.S.
policy in Iraq. The hearings will call top political,
economic and intelligence experts; foreign diplomats;
and former and current senior U.S. officials to examine
the situation in Iraq and possible plans for dealing
with it. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will
probably testify next Thursday to defend the president's
new plan, but at least eight other plans will be
examined over several sessions of the committee.
Other witnesses invited for at least 10 days of hearings
include former national security advisers and
secretaries of state, including Brent Scowcroft, Samuel
R. "Sandy" Berger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Henry A.
Kissinger, Madeleine K. Albright and George P. Shultz.
Biden expressed opposition to the president's plan for a
"surge" of additional U.S. troops and said he has grave
doubts about whether the Iraqi government has the will
or the capacity to help implement a new approach. He
said he hopes to use the hearings to "illuminate the
alternatives available to this president" and to provide
a platform for influencing Americans, especially
Republican lawmakers.
"There is nothing a United States Senate can do to stop
a president from conducting his war," Biden said. "The
only thing that is going to change the president's mind,
if he continues on a course that is counterproductive,
is having his party walk away from his position."
Biden said that Vice President Cheney and former defense
secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld "are really smart guys who
made a very, very, very, very bad bet, and it blew up in
their faces. Now, what do they do with it? I think they
have concluded they can't fix it, so how do you keep it
stitched together without it completely unraveling?"
© 2007 The Washington Post Company
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