2007年VOA标准英语-US House Opens Debate on US Withdrawal from Ira(在线收听) |
By Dan Robinson The U.S. House of Representatives has begun a debate on a spending measure containing more than $95 billion to fund the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. VOA's Dan Robinson reports, President Bush reiterated his displeasure with the way congressional Democrats are moving the measure through the House and has threatened to veto it. In more than five hours of debate stretching to a planned vote Friday, Democrats and Republicans will repeat the positions they have voiced in recent weeks in support and opposition to the legislation. The bill ties funding needed to support the more than 140,000 troops in Iraq and another 20,000 in Afghanistan with requirements to limit the duration of deployments, and requirements that the president certify the readiness of military units. In addition to troop readiness requirements, the measure would require U.S. troops to be withdrawn from Iraq as early as the end of this year, but no later than August 31 of 2008. The pullout would be triggered if the president is unable to report to Congress that the Iraqi government is satisfactorily meet political, economic, and security benchmarks. Democratic leaders have had a difficult time persuading all their members, but specifically the most outspoken anti-war Democrats and some moderates, to support the legislation. Opposition Republicans are virtually unanimous against the measure because it contains billions of dollars not related to military needs. President Bush says he will veto any legislation that establishes a timetable or other conditions. After meeting with Americans working on Iraqi provincial reconstruction teams, the president issued another warning to congressional Democrats. "In the bill that's now being debated, there is money to help you do your jobs in that bill -- and Congress needs to get that bill out as quickly as possible, without a lot of extra spending and without a lot of strings to it," he said. The Senate is expected to consider its version of funding legislation as early as next week, after the Senate appropriations committee approved a measure calling for a U.S. troop withdrawal from Iraq by March of 2008, but providing about $3 billion less than the House measure Before the Iraq bill reached the floor of the House, Democrats heard from two prominent figures who urged them to vote for it. Former Democratic Congressman Lee Hamilton, who co-chaired the bipartisan Iraq Study Group, said the measure provides "a light at the end of the tunnel" [for the U.S. involvement in Iraq]. And in a closed door meeting, former U.S. national security adviser under President Jimmy Carter, Zbigniew Brzezinski, told Democrats that a "no" vote would send a message of confusion to President Bush and give him a free hand in Iraq. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/3/37776.html |