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Thursday, February 8, 2007

War resolution seen hurting morale

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Senate Republicans yesterday contradicted top Pentagon officials who say Congress would not injure troop morale by passing a nonbinding resolution critical of President Bush's Iraq war plan.

Sen. Lindsey Graham said he was outraged that Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Peter Pace and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates would say U.S. combat forces "understand" politics back home and won't be disheartened by a symbolic no-confidence vote against the commander in chief.

"It shows a lack of sophistication about how this would play in newspaper headlines throughout the world," said Mr. Graham, South Carolina Republican.

"The war on terror is about headlines," he told The Washington Times. "The last thing we need to do is give [terrorists] a headline by our political action that would embolden them, and by contrast would be hurtful to our men and women in the theater trying to execute the new strategy."

Mr. Graham continued, "The only way we will ever lose in Iraq is if our will to succeed is broken."

Mr. Gates and Gen. Pace did say that a resolution against the president's plan to reinforce forces in Iraq with 21,500 more troops would send the wrong signal to al Qaeda and other U.S. enemies. Still, their remarks about morale undercut one of the chief arguments against the resolutions that would criticize Mr. Bush's troop-surge plan.

Sen. Jon Kyl, Arizona Republican, said Gen. Pace and Mr. Gates were cornered into dismissing the impact on morale during their testimony Wednesday before the House Armed Services Committee.

"I would hardly have expected either of them to have answered the question any differently," he said, adding that he still thinks a resolution "will send the wrong message to our allies, to our enemies, and to our troops and their families."

Mr. Kyl noted his speech last week in which he quoted three U.S. troops in Iraq who told NBC's "Nightly News" that they take criticism of the war effort personally.

For instance, Mr. Kyl quoted Army Spc. Peter Manna, who said, "If they don't think what we're doing is a good job, everything that we've done here is all in vain -- is all in vain."

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