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Iraq | ||
Rep. Kline says he sees 'amazing' progress in Iraq | ||
2007-09-26 | ||
Kline said the lawmakers were greeted by children who laughed, teased and asked for money. Adults smiled and gave the thumbs up. "Just a sense of normalcy — people getting on with their lives," he said. The take by Kline, a conservative Republican, was similar to one by the state's liberal Democratic Rep. Keith Ellison, who visited Ramadi in July. In that trip, Ellison noted that people were walking the streets of the city, going to the market, and he had commented on the "general level of respect and calm that I thought was good." But these two lawmakers have opposite approaches in mind for Iraq, with Ellison calling for the withdrawal of U.S. troops, and Kline supporting the Bush administration's policy. Kline, a retired Marine, said he thought the surge of U.S. troops helped, but wasn't the deciding factor. "I don't think it would be fair to say that the surge is responsible for what happened in Ramadi," he said. "It just sort of reinforced it. It showed the sheiks and the Iraqis there that the Americans were committed. It helped tip it in our direction." Kline said the surge was more than adding 30,000 troops. "What we've done is change how we're working there," he said. "Now they're interwoven with, sharing the same building with the Iraqi security forces. And I think that has really made the difference." Kline said he wasn't able to get out and talk to children in Baghdad, but that the situation there was much improved from his previous visit, in June of last year. "It's much more like it was the first time I went, in October 2003," he said. In Baghdad, the group got a briefing from Maj. Gen. Joseph Fil, a senior U.S. commander. According to Kline, Fil told the lawmakers that while security has improved with Iraqis turning away from al-Qaida, there are still neighborhoods where fighting remains intense. "It's still very dangerous and al-Qaida has sort of dug in in some of the neighborhoods," Kline said, "and the Iraqi Army and Iraqi police and U.S. and coalition forces are still engaged in some very heavy, tough fighting." | ||
Posted by:Steve White |
#2 So what is Abercrombie's take on the very same visit??? |
Posted by: USN, Ret. 2007-09-26 14:21 |
#1 LALALALALALALALA, we are not listening to yooooooou... |
Posted by: Fifth Column Media 2007-09-26 03:21 |