UPDATE 2-U.S. Senate backs troop withdrawal from Iraq

Tue Mar 27, 2007 7:12pm EDT
 
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(adds White House veto warning, quotes and background)

By Richard Cowan

WASHINGTON, March 27 (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate on Tuesday endorsed a March 31, 2008, target date for withdrawing American combat troops from Iraq, prompting the White House to threaten a veto and moving Congress a step closer to a showdown with President George W. Bush over the war.

By a vote of 50-48, the Senate defeated an amendment that would have stricken the withdrawal language from a $121.6 billion bill that mostly would fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

With the outcome in doubt, Vice President Dick Cheney was on hand in the Capitol in case he was needed to cast a tie-breaking vote.

A final vote on the bill is expected this week.

Following the vote, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino cited "encouraging signs" lately in Iraq. "The president is disappointed that the Senate continues down a path with a bill that he will veto and has no chance of becoming law," she added.

But Democrats showed no signs of backing down.

"This war is not worth the spilling of another drop of American blood," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, said in pleading for the troop withdrawal plan included in the money bill.

Speaking to reporters following the Senate vote, Reid countered the White House veto threat, saying, "We would hope that the president understands how serious we are and the American people are and that, rather than making all the threats that he has, let's work with him" toward a compromise.

In action unrelated to the Iraq war, the Senate attached to the spending bill a minimum wage hike for some of the lowest-paid U.S. workers, along with tax cuts for small businesses.

The Senate troop withdrawal vote came four days after the House passed its version of a war-spending bill setting a mandatory Sept. 1, 2008, deadline for getting all U.S. combat troops out of Iraq.

Under the Senate bill, which is still being debated, the United States would begin a phased withdrawal of troops this year with the goal, not the requirement, that it be completed by March 31, 2008.

Tuesday's vote in the Senate marked progress for Democrats in that chamber, who failed recently to pass a similar, nonbinding resolution calling for a troop withdrawal.

TWO REPUBLICANS JOIN

Two Republicans joined most Democrats in supporting the troop withdrawal goal.  Continued...

 

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