WASHINGTON - The deaths of Saddam
Hussein's sons yesterday gave President Bush a break from mounting
U.S. casualties and growing doubts about his rationale for war but
did not silence his critics or solve his problems in Iraq.
Bush's critics have not questioned whether the U.S. military
could kill Iraqis; rather, they have accused the President of
distorting evidence that Iraq posed an imminent threat to the United
States and its interests, one requiring a preemptive war. Critics
also have called for Bush to seek more help from allies in policing
postwar Iraq rather than having U.S. troops shoulder so much of the
load.
The deaths of Hussein's sons, Odai and Qusai, are unlikely to
silence the President's critics on either point unless Iraqi
resistance to the American occupation ends with their deaths. And
even Bush's supporters cautioned that the sons' demise was unlikely
to end Iraqi attacks on U.S. troops or resistance to the
occupation.
"We have to have some patience," said Rep. Porter J. Goss (R.,
Fla.), chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. "People should
be cheered, but this is not a short run but a long run."
Democratic critics of the President's Iraq policy acknowledged
the deaths of Hussein's sons as a welcome development but tempered
their praise for the job done by American troops by continuing to
criticize the administration's occupation of Iraq.
"No one can underestimate the value of the developments today,"
Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D., S.D.) said. "But I would
simply say that what many of us have said from the beginning is that
in order to win the peace, we need more help. We need more
resources; we need more personnel; we need more international
involvement. This doesn't change that."
Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D., Ill.), a member of the Senate
Intelligence Committee and one of the Bush administration's most
persistent critics on Iraq, said the deaths did not end the danger
American troops were facing.
"If they're any inspiration to the guerrillas, I'm glad they're
gone," Durbin said. "The sad reality is that our troops are still in
a dangerous situation. We can expect, unfortunately, more bad
news."
White House officials have become increasingly concerned that
public unease about problems in postwar Iraq could hurt Bush's
prospects for reelection in 2004, and his approval ratings in polls
have slipped.
In a series of meetings yesterday on Capitol Hill, L. Paul
Bremer, the top U.S. official in Iraq, sought to reassure lawmakers
that the rebuilding effort was on track.
The Senate Armed Services Committee chairman, John W. Warner (R.,
Va.), said Bremer made a strong case that the United States was
making good progress stabilizing Iraq. But Bremer outlined the
"magnitude of the problems ahead," including providing electricity
to the country, Warner said.
Despite the good news from Iraq, White House officials were still
trying to quell the controversy over the President's State of the
Union address in January, holding another briefing to explain Bush's
use of flawed intelligence in the speech.
National security adviser Condoleezza Rice's deputy Stephen
Hadley joined CIA Director George Tenet in taking the blame for
Bush's statement citing British intelligence that Iraq had shopped
in Africa for uranium that could be used in a nuclear bomb.
Administration officials concede that the assertion was
questionable and should not have been used as a reason for war.
The relatively restrained response from Republicans to
yesterday's developments in Iraq belied the concern that had been
building within the party about the toll the Democrats' attacks were
taking on Bush. Republican leaders were concerned enough that on
Monday, they launched a counteroffensive to rebut the criticism.
White House communications director Dan Bartlett urged Republican
lawmakers to defend the President's record, and the incoming
Republican National Committee chairman, Ed Gillespie, sent a memo to
GOP congressional leaders that accused Democrats of a "passive,
reactive approach" to the war on terrorism that "would put America's
fate in the hands of people who seek to destroy us."
In an interview yesterday morning with the Washington Post,
Gillespie contended that Bush's opponents were seeking a standard of
absolute proof that Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. He
called that a "frightening foreign-policy position" that would be
rejected by the American people.
Reached late yesterday afternoon by the Post, Gillespie called
the confirmation of the killings "a very tangible sign of the
success of our policies," but, reflecting the caution within GOP
circles, declined to restate his direct criticism of the
Democrats.
Republican pollster Bill McInturff said the killing of Hussein's
sons "breaks the news cycle" that had put the President on the
defensive. "We can have a broader discussion about the future and
security of Iraq," he said, "and that broader discussion helps the
President."
This article contains information from the
Washington Post.