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Washington power elite advises Bush on Iraq
06 Dec 2006 17:33:55 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Steve Holland

WASHINGTON, Dec 6 (Reuters) - Sage members of Washington's power elite shuffled into the White House on Wednesday to advise President George W. Bush that his current approach is not working in Iraq and that it is time for a change.

The 10 members of the Iraq Study Group were up long before dawn for a 7 a.m. (1200 GMT) meeting and they spent about an hour talking to Bush about the 79 recommendations they spent nine months developing on how to change Iraq strategy.

"We're not here to vex and embarrass," former Wyoming Republican Sen. Alan Simpson, 75, who was a close ally of the president's father, told Bush.

But the message from what panel co-chairman James Baker called a "bunch of has-beens" was clear: It is time for a change.

"We do not recommend a stay-the-course solution. In our opinion that approach is no longer viable," Baker told reporters afterward.

Those were strong words from a former U.S. secretary of state who is close to the Bush family and who led the legal team that helped George W. Bush win the Florida vote recount in 2000 that ultimately put him in the White House.

Gazing around the large oval table in the White House Cabinet Room, Bush looked into the eyes of public servants with decades of public service, most of them in their 70s, who spent their careers fighting their own Washington battles.

Almost directly across from Bush were former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, the first woman in that role and the only woman on the panel, and former Attorney General Edwin Meese, who helped bail Ronald Reagan's presidency out of the Iran-Contra scandal in the 1980s.

Down at the end was Vernon Jordan, the 71-year-old Democrat who is a Washington powerbroker and advised President Bill Clinton during the various problems that plagued his administration.

"I cannot think of an experience like this experience. We checked our partisanship at the door," Jordan told the assembled group.

White House spokesman Tony Snow, who sat in on the meeting, said the presentation of the report offered a moment for "people of good will in both parties to dedicate themselves seriously and actively to the business of developing" an Iraq strategy.

"There was a sense that everybody there understood that Americans have grown weary of partisanship in this case and that the country has an interest in pulling together," Snow said.

But whether the panel's book, copies of which were placed before them in the Cabinet Room, will be used for a shift in strategy by the Bush team was unclear.

Bush himself offered a cautious response. He considers the Iraq Study Group report one of several reviews of Iraq strategy under way, and says all will be taken seriously.

"That was good," Bush said after the presentation, calling the panel's report "necessary work."
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PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2006 U.S. military officer Major-General William Caldwell speaks beside a framed picture of the dead al Qaeda leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, during a news conference at the fortified Green Zone in Baghdad June 8, 2006.