男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影

Asia-Pacific

Obama's Afghanistan plan criticized by his party

(Agencies)
Updated: 2011-06-23 20:22
Large Medium Small

Obama's Afghanistan plan criticized by his party
US President Barack Obama speaks about the war in Afghanistan during a televised address from the East Room of the White House in Washington June 22, 2011. Obama on Wednesday unveiled his plan to start bringing US troops home from Afghanistan in a significant first step toward ending a decade-long war that is increasingly unpopular in the United States. [Photo/Agencies]

WASHINGTON - Lawmakers in President Barack Obama's Democratic Party are leading the criticism of his troop withdrawal plan from Afghanistan, arguing that the timeline for bringing 33,000 US troops home by next summer isn't fast enough.

Related readings:
Obama's Afghanistan plan criticized by his partyObama: 33,000 troops leaving Afghanistan by 2012 

An initial drawdown of 10,000 troops is expected to take place in two phases, with 5,000 troops coming home within the next few months and 5,000 more by the end of the year. An additional 20,000-plus are to follow by September 2012.

Democrats said that wasn't adequate.

"It has been the hope of many in Congress and across the country that the full drawdown of US forces would happen sooner than the president laid out - and we will continue to press for a better outcome," said Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, leading a chorus of disgruntled Democrats who took the president to task, albeit politely.

From across the aisle, the Republican response to Obama's timeline for withdrawing tens of thousands of troops was measured. Republican House Speaker John Boehner warned Obama not to sacrifice the gains the US has made in Afghanistan, while Republican Sen. John McCain, Obama's rival in the 2008 presidential election, said the drawdown was too rash.

"This is not the 'modest' withdrawal that I and others had hoped for and advocated," McCain said in a statement following Obama's televised prime-time address to the country Wednesday night.

Potential Republican presidential candidates also were quick to weigh in with criticism of Obama's plan.

Former Massachusetts Gov Mitt Romney accused Obama of proposing an "arbitrary timetable" and said the decision on withdrawing troops "should not be based on politics or economics."

However, Jon Huntsman, Obama's former ambassador to China, said the approach in Afghanistan should be focused on counterterrorism, "which requires significantly fewer boots on the ground than the president discussed tonight."

As Obama works to sell his withdrawal plan, on Thursday he was to visit Fort Drum, the New York state Army post that is home to the 10th Mountain Division, one of the most frequently deployed divisions to Afghanistan.

Obama ordered more than 30,000 "surge" forces to Afghanistan in 2009 in order to rescue a flailing effort, and promised to start bringing them home in July of this year. In his speech Wednesday night, he declared: "The tide of war is receding."

Even after the surge forces leave Afghanistan, 70,000 US troops will remain in an unstable country, fighting in a war bound to see more Americans killed. Obama said they will leave at a steady pace, but the US combat mission is not expected to end until December 2014 - and even then, a sizable and enduring contingent may remain in a different role.

Obama's announcement from the White House came in a perilous political environment. Most Americans oppose the war in Afghanistan and are far more concerned about the teetering economic recovery at home.

At least 1,500 members of the US military have died and 12,000 have been wounded since the war began in late 2001. The financial cost of the war has passed $440 billion and is on the rise, jumping to $120 billion a year. Those costs have risen in importance as a divided US government struggles to contain its soaring debt.

Conceding the economic strain of waging war at a time of rising debt and fiscal constraint, Obama said it was time for America "to focus on nation-building here at home." The president's chances for re-election rest largely on his ability to show faster job growth in a time of deepening economic pessimism.

The withdrawal is supported by the bold bottom-line claims of his security team: Afghanistan, training ground for the September 11, 2001, attacks on the US, no longer is a launching pad for exporting terrorism and hasn't been for years. But that also could fuel arguments for even greater withdrawals by voters wondering what the point of the war is after all these years, especially since the face of the enemy - al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden _ was killed by American forces last month during a US raid in Pakistan.

Yet the White House insists the US must maintain a strong fighting force in Afghanistan for now to keep the country from slipping back into a terrorist haven.

Obama said Wednesday that materials recovered during the raid to get bin Laden showed that al-Qaida was under deep strain. He said bin Laden himself expressed concern that his organization would be unable to effectively replace senior leaders that had been killed.

The president declared, "We have put al-Qaida on a path to defeat, and we will not relent until the job is done."

Even after the troops come home, the war will remain expanded on Obama's watch. He approved 21,000 additional troops for Afghanistan shortly after taking office in 2009, bringing the total number to 68,000. That means he is likely to face re-election with more troops in Afghanistan than when he took office, although he has also dramatically reduced the US military presence in Iraq.

Military commanders favored a plan that would allow them to keep as many of the 30,000 surge troops in Afghanistan for as long as possible, ideally through the end of 2012. That timeline would have given them greater troop strength through two crucial fighting seasons. Obama overruled them.

Associated Press writers Robert Burns, Lolita C Baldor, Matthew Lee and Donna Cassata in Washington and Solomon Moore in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.

 

分享按鈕
主站蜘蛛池模板: 绥德县| 凌源市| 日喀则市| 永昌县| 衢州市| 阿坝| 报价| 巩留县| 海南省| 灵石县| 吉林省| 翼城县| 新余市| 惠东县| 新丰县| 来宾市| 衡阳县| 南川市| 繁峙县| 三江| 长垣县| 南投县| 莱阳市| 双柏县| 漾濞| 恩施市| 宜川县| 清涧县| 蚌埠市| 富裕县| 临湘市| 蓝山县| 莆田市| 阳曲县| 溧水县| 洪洞县| 志丹县| 宝应县| 禄丰县| 新乡市| 延庆县| 黎平县| 收藏| 和静县| 嵊泗县| 湖口县| 姚安县| 沾化县| 宜丰县| 天长市| 石景山区| 云阳县| 建瓯市| 丹东市| 宜宾县| 新郑市| 拉孜县| 馆陶县| 太和县| 简阳市| 宜良县| 正定县| 巩留县| 大港区| 麻栗坡县| 永寿县| 洛南县| 武陟县| 新绛县| 武清区| 德阳市| 南昌市| 同心县| 股票| 芜湖市| 华宁县| 万荣县| 静安区| 治县。| 观塘区| 三穗县| 永城市|