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Bush gives Iraq war $100bn
26/05/2007 08:39 - (SA)
Washington - United States President George W Bush signed a bill on Friday providing $100bn to pay for the Iraq war but congressional Democrats who failed to impose a troop withdrawal deadline said their fight was far from over.
Passage of the emergency spending legislation capped a four-month struggle between Bush and a new Democratic-controlled congress determined to force him to shift course in the unpopular war.
Bush had vetoed an earlier bill that would have required him to begin withdrawing soldiers from Iraq by October 1, and he vowed to kill any legislation carrying restrictions on troop deployments.
With Democrats lacking the votes to override the president and the war funds running out, a divided congress passed a compromise measure on Thursday.
"We've got a good bill that doesn't have timetables or tell the military how to do its job but also sent a clear signal to the Iraqis that there's expectations here in America... about how to move forward," Bush said after visiting wounded military personnel at a naval hospital in Bethesda, Maryland.
He signed the bill in private at the presidential retreat at Camp David, Maryland, later on Friday. He planned to spend a long weekend there for the Memorial Day holiday honouring America's war dead.
Democratics slammed for allowing bill
The legislation gives Bush the funds he sought without any requirement that he bring troops home, but it does set a series of "benchmarks" for the Iraqi government to meet and ties a small amount of non-military US aid to achieving progress.
Despite losing the latest round to Bush, Democrats vowed to keep up efforts to force him to start bringing US troops home from Iraq.
Slammed by US anti-war groups for allowing the bill to pass, house speaker Nancy Pelosi said Democrats would quickly resume their drive to impose deadlines for pulling US forces out of Iraq.
She said she would put on the house agenda a bill to repeal congress' 2002 authorisation of the Iraq war and said Democrats would use next year's military spending bills to try end the war that had killed at least 3 420 US soldiers and wounded more than 34 000. Iraqis have had far worse casualties.
Democrats won control of congress in November's midterm elections, propelled by public disenchantment with the war.
According to a CBS News/New York Times poll, 76% of Americans believed the war was going somewhat or very badly for the US and only 20% said Bush's recent troop increase was making a positive difference.
- Reuters
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