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SLUG: 2-307030 (CQ) Bush Iraq (L O)
DATE:>
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=8/31/03

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=(CQ) BUSH IRAQ (L-O)

NUMBER=2-307030

BYLINE=PAULA WOLFSON

DATELINE= WHITE HOUSE

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

/// RE-ISSUING TO CORRECT SPELLING ERROR IN FIRST SENTENCE OF SIXTH GRAF OF TEXT: SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN, STED DURBAN AS ORIGINALLY SENT ///

INTRO: It is back to business this week in Washington, with President Bush returned from a month-long vacation, and Congress about to follow. V-O-A's Paula Wolfson reports the big issue in the days and weeks ahead is sure to be Iraq.

TEXT: The Sunday television news interview programs in the United States showed a tough debate lies ahead, as prominent members of Congress raised questions about the cost and duration of America's involvement in Iraq.

On Fox News Sunday, a senior member of the president's political party called on the White House to be more forthright about Iraq, spelling out the amount of money and number of troops needed to rebuild the country and get it on the right track.

Senator Richard Lugar, the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said about 30-billion dollars will be needed to run the country over the next five years in addition to ongoing military expenses of about four billion a month. He urged President Bush to send Congress a five-year budget for Iraqi operations.

/// LUGAR ACT ///

In other words, give confidence to the Iraqis that we are there for the long run, give confidence to the rest of the world that we are prepared to deal on how we get money from them, troops from them, all the things we need from them, and work this problem systematically.

/// END ACT ///

The Indiana Republican said the task ahead will not be easy, noting that scholars warned his committee a long time ago that it would be difficult to hold Iraq's three major ethnic factions together: the Shiite and Sunni Muslims and the Kurds.

/// LUGAR ACT///

It is a very, very complex situation and what we have taken on is a daunting task that no one has taken on.

/// END ACT ///

There was even tougher talk on N-B-C's Meet the Press, where a discussion of Iraq mixed with the politics of the 2004 presidential election campaign. Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, who is seeking the Democratic Party nomination, said the Bush administration's policy is flawed.

/// KERRY ACT ///

We are in danger, if we do not do what we need to do in the next months, of having an enormous quagmire, of having a very serious challenge. These are enormously challenging moments.

/// END ACT ///

Senator Kerry said the Bush administration needs to work vigorously with the United Nations to get more foreign troops into Iraq. On A-B-C's This Week, Senator Jon Kyl, an Arizona Republican, defended the president's stand. He said while the White House may consider U-N troops under American command, the United States can only go so far.

/// KYL ACT ///

The question is: what are the terms? If you are going to turn the decisions, the policies over to the countries that opposed our efforts in the first place, that is a mistake.

/// END ACT ///

But Senator Richard Durbin told This Week that a U-N role is essential. The Illinois Democrat was one of the early critics of the decision to take military action against Iraq. He said people he talked to in his state during the month-long congressional break support the troops, but share some deep concerns.

/// DURBAN ACT ///

People are still as loyal as they can be to the troops in the field and believe they are the best in the world. But they are genuinely concerned that the number of forces we have lost since the declaration of military victory is greater than lost during the course of the war.

/// END ACT ///

The White House has long maintained that the president declared an end to major combat operations in May, and did not declare victory. Mr. Bush has said he grieves for all the troops lost, but the U-S will stay the course in Iraq. He has also said money will be found to get the job done, with an emergency spending request set to go to Capitol Hill not long after lawmakers return to Washington. (SIGNED)

NEB/PW/RAE/KL



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