Washington waits on the Iraq Study Group
Who are the D.C. wise men (and woman) behind the commission?
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"Our report will not be particularly meaningful if it has dissenting views," says James Baker, co-chairman of the so-called Iraq Study Group, commissioned by President Bush. "And we are working very, very hard to achieve a consensus report."
But how to bridge the divide between staying the course and withdrawing, starting in four to six months?
People close to the commission say their prescriptions will be tough, including a phased withdrawal, tied to deadlines for Iraq's government to control the violence; and a regional conference involving Iran and Syria.
"It's been the most remarkable commission I've ever seen in foreign policy," says David Gergen, a former White House adviser to Presidents Clinton, Reagan, Ford and Nixon. "It's almost as if the White House is outsourcing its foreign policy plan to a group on the outside."
The key to making it work?
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The longtime combatants say this time they've checked their politics — and egos — at the door.
"When you've been around Washington long enough," says Gergen, "there develops a certain feeling among people who are kindred souls, who have been in the battles, too, and may have been on the other side, but they become, in effect, brothers."
They've heard from Presidents Bush and Clinton and British Prime Minister Tony Blair. All told, they've talked to almost 150 witnesses.
Their biggest problem?
Several say that the country expects a strategy for success in Iraq, when victory may no longer be an option.
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