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Senate rejects timetable for Iraq withdrawal

Alternate language calls on Bush to outline plan, however

NBC VIDEO
Senate weighs Iraq exit strategy
Nov. 15: After rejecting a Democratic call for an exit timetable, the Senate on Tuesday approved alternative language saying Iraqi forces should take the lead in providing security in 2006.

Nightly News

NBC VIDEO
Frist discusses Iraq policy
Nov. 15: Ahead of Tuesday's vote, Senate Majority leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., discusses the Republican proposal for Iraq policy guidelines.

Today show

Conflict in Iraq video  
‘George Bush Square’?
Nov. 21: More than 10,000 Iraqis took to the streets and protested the agreement that would keep U.S. troops in Iraq. They protested by burning an effigy of President George W. Bush. Rachel Maddow has the latest from NBC News chief foreign correspondent Richard Engel.

Interactive
Fight for Iraq
Learn more about the ethnic, religious and political powerplays in this virtual tour led by NBC’s Richard Engel.
updated 11:19 p.m. ET Nov. 15, 2005

WASHINGTON - The GOP-controlled Senate rejected a Democratic call Tuesday for a timetable for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq but urged President Bush to outline his plan for “the successful completion of the mission” in a bill reflecting a growing bipartisan unease with his Iraq policies.

The overall measure, adopted 98-0, shows a willingness to defy the president in several ways despite a threatened veto. It would restrict the techniques used to interrogate terrorism suspects, ban their inhuman treatment and call for the administration to provide lawmakers with quarterly reports on the status of operations in Iraq.

Bush, traveling in Japan, said he is happy to keep Congress informed of his plan to bring democracy to Iraq.

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“It is important that we succeed in Iraq ... and we’re going to,” Bush said during a press conference with Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. “The only way that we won’t succeed is if we lose our nerve and the terrorists are able to drive us out of Iraq by killing innocent lives.”

The bill was not without victories for the president, including support for the military tribunals Bush has set up to try detainees at the prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Yet even that was tempered, with language letting the inmates appeal to a federal court their designation as enemy combatants and their sentences.

The Senate’s votes on Iraq showed a willingness even by Republicans to question the White House on a war that’s growing increasingly unpopular with Americans.

Polls show Bush’s popularity has tumbled in part because of public frustration over Iraq, a war that has claimed the lives of more than 2,000 American troops.

Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the outcome was “a vote of no confidence on the president’s policies in Iraq.” Republicans “acknowledged that there need to be changes made,” he said.

But Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., trumpeted the chamber’s rejection of the Democratic call for a withdrawal timetable.

“It is an absolute repudiation of the cut-and-run strategy put forward by the Democrats,” Frist said.

Bush also highlighted the rejection of the withdrawal amendment, calling it a “positive step.”

“The Senate did ask that we report on progress being made in Iraq, which we’re more than willing to do,” Bush said. “That’s to be expected. That’s what the Congress expects. They expect us to keep them abreast of a plan that is going to work.”


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