Showing posts with label POLITICS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POLITICS. Show all posts

2 sets of facts in budget dispute

WASHINGTON – To hear the Democrats tell it, House Republicans are being dragged by their extreme tea party allies to shut down the government, yet agreement is near on a sensible package of spending cuts to prevent it.
And according to Republicans, Democrats want a government shutdown and talks aren't all that far along to avoid one.
Welcome to divided government, where each party lays claim to its own set of facts, federal agencies face a shutdown on April 9 without a compromise and any progress toward a deal is wrapped in partisan rhetoric.
"Now, here's the bottom line. Democrats are rooting for a government shutdown," House Speaker John Boehner said Thursday at a news conference.
Republicans are "listening to the people who sent us here to cut spending so we can grow our economy. As I said from the beginning, our goal is to cut spending, not shut down the government."
Democrats have yet to outline a plan to cut spending, he added, "only rhetoric portraying the American people as extreme."
A few hours later, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., strode onto the Senate floor and said, "We are right at the doorstep of a deal."
"As the vice president said last night, there has been agreement to meet in the middle, around $33 billion in cuts," he said. The New York Democrat referred to Vice President Joe Biden's statement in the Capitol on Wednesday evening that the two sides were working on a deal containing that level of cuts.

US reducing naval firepower aimed at Gadhafi

WASHINGTON – In a sign of U.S. confidence that the weeklong assault on Libya has tamed Moammar Gadhafi's air defenses, the Pentagon has reduced the amount of naval firepower arrayed against him, officials said Sunday.
The move, not yet publicly announced, reinforces the White House message of a diminishing U.S. role — a central point in President Barack Obama's national address Monday night on Libya. The White House booked Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on three Sunday news shows to promote the administration's case ahead of the speech.
Yet Gates, asked whether the military operation might be over by year's end, said, "I don't think anybody knows the answer to that."
At least one of the five Navy ships and submarines that have launched dozens of Tomahawk cruise missiles at Libyan targets from positions in the Mediterranean Sea has left the area, three defense officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss sensitive military movements.
That still leaves what officials believe is sufficient naval firepower off Libya's coast, and it coincides with NATO's decision Sunday to take over command and control of the entire Libya operation. Aided by international air power, Libyan rebels were reported to have made important gains by capturing two oil complexes along the coast.
The shrinking of the naval presence adds substance to Obama's expected reassurance to the American people that after kicking off the Libyan mission, the U.S. is now handing off to partner countries in Europe and elsewhere the bulk of the responsibility for suppressing Gadhafi's forces.
NATO's governing body, meeting in Brussels, accepted a plan for the transfer of command. That is expected to mean that U.S. Army Gen. Carter Ham, who has been the top commander of the Libya operation, will switch to a support role.
Obama administration officials claimed progress in Libya, but lawmakers in both parties voiced skepticism over the length, scope and costs of the mission.
Obama is trying to address those issues in a speech that's expected to provide his fullest explanation of the U.S. role in Libya and what lies ahead.

Indispensable US: Hard to shed leadership in Libya

WASHINGTON – For decades, the United States has been the West's indispensable go-to power for leading international military endeavors. Now it is struggling to shed that role as it tries to take a step back in the confrontation with Libya.
But it's easier said than done. Each passing day is drawing the Pentagon deeper into the ground battle in Libya against the forces of Col. Moammar Gadhafi.
This was driven home when NATO agreed late this week to take over just part of the military operations against Libya — enforcement of the newly established no-fly zone, following days of discord and hard bargaining among its members.
U.S. officials still hope NATO also will assume responsibility for attacks on Gadhafi's ground forces and other targets, the toughest and most controversial portion of the operation. But that was still up in the air.
Otherwise, attacks on ground forces will continue to be overseen by the coalition nominally led by Washington. This is a responsibility the U.S. absolutely does not want to bear.
The last thing that President Barack Obama needs is to be left holding the bag on Libya. With U.S. budgets and troop levels already heavily strained by prolonged wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Obama can ill afford overseeing another war in another Muslim country.
His press secretary, Jay Carney, said Friday that agreement had been reached on a political level for NATO to assume control of the entire Libya mission but that the military plans associated with it were still being worked out. It appeared that the United States, along with France and Great Britain, would maintain primary responsibility for attacks on Gadhafi's ground forces and air defense systems.
Carney declared, "What we will not be is in the lead, either in the no-fly zone or the civilian protection."
The administration clings to its insistence that it will not send U.S. troops into Libya. But it may be hard to stand fast.
"Because we were present at the creation, we are partly responsible for how this goes. And if it goes south, or toward any other endgame that requires decision making and further effort, we will be implicated at some level," said Michael O'Hanlon, a foreign policy fellow at the Brookings Institution.
"So if more military operations are needed in the future, let's say arming the rebels, we may have to be involved with special forces and helping to do that. There are all sorts of ways I can imagine us having to do more in the future, even if we don't have to do more now," O'Hanlon said.
Anders Fogh Rasmussen, NATO secretary-general, said in Brussels that the NATO alliance eventually could take more responsibility, "but that decision has not been reached yet."
Some NATO countries, particularly the sole Muslim member, Turkey, have balked at any involvement in attacks on ground targets. NATO has no procedures for taking formal votes. All of its actions must be unanimous among its 28 members.
The U.S had hoped the alliance would reach a consensus before week's end for NATO to take full control of the military operation authorized by the United Nations, including the protection of Libyan civilians and support of humanitarian aid efforts on the ground. But it was not clear when those outstanding issues might be tackled. The military operation has cost the U.S. close to $1 billion in less than a week and has drawn criticism in Congress from members of both parties.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton suggested a further agreement could come as early as next week.
"All 28 allies have also now authorized military authorities to develop an operations plan for NATO to take on the broader civilian protection mission," she said Thursday. But lines of authority still were anything but clear.
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the Libya airstrikes aren't the only major U.S. military involvements right now. Some 14 Navy ships and their aircraft — and 17,000 American sailors and Marines — are deployed off the coast of Japan as part of relief efforts.
Whether rushing food and supplies to Japanese earthquake-tsunami victims or taking the lead in air strikes in Libya, the U.S. long has been looked to by its Western allies as the undisputed, essential leader for international military operations.
After all, the U.S. has what the Pentagon calls "unique capabilities" to operate globally as the world's remaining military superpower, with annual defense spending 10 times that of next-place China. No other country has the bombers, cruise missiles, aircraft carriers, refueling aircraft and command and control facilities that the United States does.
Thus, Obama confidently took the lead in launching this past week's rain of airstrikes on Libya, some from a stealth bomber that flew from as far away as an Air Force base in Missouri. But he made clear he wanted to pass the reins quickly.
It may turn out to be not so simple to claim a back seat. Being the indispensable world military power can have its liabilities.
Not wanting to follow the go-it-alone course that predecessor President George W. Bush projected, Obama set two hard-and-fast rules for American engagement in Libya: no U.S. troops on the ground and no involvement without other nations going along.
"It underscores these actions are international in nature," Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes said.
The U.S. has had a hard time persuading NATO to contribute more forces in the past in Afghanistan.
Obama has lately emphasized that the mission in Libya is intended to protect Libyan civilians from Gadhafi's wrath — and not to remove the autocrat of 42 years from power. Yet these recent statements seem hard to square with the president's parallel insistence that Gadhafi must go.
Regardless of what role NATO or others eventually assume, "the U.S. is exercising de facto command because it has the special intelligence, targeting and command and control assets needed to coordinate the effort," said Anthony Cordesman, a national security analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

ObamaWashington – Determined to see Arab and Muslim countries involved in the oversight of continuing international military operations in Libya, the Obama administration has hammered out a plan with partners that puts NATO in the driver’s seat while enlarging the decisionmaking tent to include non-alliance countries.
But countries both in and out of NATO that are participating in the Libya operations have yet to sign off on the new command-and-control plan. That could mean that – despite President Obama’s insistence the United States will step down from its lead role “this week” – any final approval could stretch into next week, when the British government will host a summit of interested countries.
The hybrid arrangement calls for NATO to take control of military operations for the five-day-old effort in Libya. At the same time, however, the foreign ministers of a broader range of countries participating in the operation, including some Arab states, would assume “political leadership” of the mission.
RELATED: UN resolution on Libya
Britain says it is inviting both the Arab League and the African Union to its summit Tuesday.
The plan that Mr. Obama lobbied for was not yet signed and sealed on Wednesday, but already critics were lambasting it as “war by international committee” that was likely to result in Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi clinging to power.
Moreover, the plan will give the operation only the patina of Arab and Muslim involvement, critics say, since so far only Qatar has jumped at taking part among Arab states.

Poll: Obama's disaster management gets solid marks

The U.S. and other countries began cruise missile and air strikes in Libya on Saturday -- an effort to protect civilians from attacks by the country's long-time ruler Muammar Qaddafi.
A CBS News survey shows that exactly half of Americans approve of how President Obama is handling the situation in Libya, and just 29 percent disapprove. Twenty-one percent said they did not have an opinion.
President Obama receives more support from Republicans on this issue than he has on domestic issues such as the economy and the deficit. Forty-three percent of Republicans say they approve of how the President is handling the crisis in Libya, and 41 percent disapprove. A majority 66 percent of Mr. Obama's Democratic voters said they approved, along with 43 percent of independents.
On another pressing international issue - the U.S. response to the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis in Japan - President Obama receives a much higher approval rating.
More than seven in 10 Americans (73 percent) say they approve of the President's handling of the U.S. response to the triple disaster, and just 14 percent expressed disapproval.
Such high marks are not unprecedented; Both President Obama and his predecessor received similarly high approval ratings for their handling of other natural disasters overseas.
In January 2005, 81 percent said they approved of President George W. Bush's handling of the tsunami in South Asia, and in January 2010, 80 percent said the same of how President Obama was handling the U.S. response to the earthquake in Haiti.
The president's overall job approval rating now stands at 49 percent, with 41 disapproval, similar to evaluations of him last month. The percentage that approves has hovered in the mid to high 40s for the past year.
As they have been, views of Mr. Obama are polarized by partisanship - 78 percent of Democrats approve of the job he is doing, but that drops to 18 percent among Republicans. Independents are more closely divided - 46 percent approve, and 39 percent disapprove. 

U.S. stresses limits to military role in Libya

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Top U.S. officials on Sunday stressed the limits of American military involvement in Libya, despite a heavy assault on Muammar Gaddafi's forces, and said Libyans would decide their country's fate themselves.
White House National Security Adviser Tom Donilon said Libyan leader Gaddafi had "lost legitimacy" and was isolated but the focus of military action was on protecting Libyan civilians, not ousting the veteran ruler from power.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates, speaking as he flew to Russia, said the U.S. will not have a "preeminent role" in the coalition that will maintain a no-fly zone over Libya, and expected to turn over "primary responsibility" for the mission to others within days.
Britain or France could take charge of the air operation, or NATO could lead, if sensitivities among the Arab League over working under the Western alliance leadership were assuaged.
Gates spoke amid growing concern among U.S. politicians over the scope and nature of the Libya mission and after an acknowledgement from the top U.S. military officer that the assault on Gaddafi's forces could lead to an impasse.

But Donilon, who spoke to reporters while traveling with U.S. President Barack Obama in Brazil, said Washington and its allies had "a very good first day" in the Libya mission.
The United States says the U.N.-endorsed intervention is aimed at forcing Gaddafi's troops into a ceasefire and ending attacks on civilians who launched an uprising last month.
Obama has called in recent weeks for Gaddafi to step down but U.S. officials have emphasized that is not the goal of the United Nations authorized attacks on Libya. The United States is eager to avoid similarities to the 2003 invasion of Iraq and ouster of President Saddam Hussein.
Forces loyal to Gaddafi, who has ruled Libya for 41 years, had been taking back large swathes of territory from rebels until the air attacks, which may give the rebels the chance to regroup. Military analysts say it is unclear if they can.
"I think this is basically going to have to be resolved by the Libyans themselves," said Gates. "Whether or not there is additional outside help for the rebels remains to be seen."
Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S. military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the CBS program "Face the Nation" the air mission in the North African country has a clear, limited scope.
STALEMATE POSSIBLE
But Mullen said the outcome of military action in Libya was "very uncertain." Asked if it could end in a stalemate with Gaddafi, Mullen replied: "I don't think that's for me to answer. Certainly, I recognize that's a possibility."
Gates said the United States wanted Libya to remain a unified country, saying partition into a rebel-held east and Gaddafi-controlled west "would be a real formula for enduring instability."
The aerial assault by U.S., French and British planes has halted an advance by Gaddafi's armored units on the rebel-held city of Benghazi and attacks on air defenses and radar sites have allowed the ad-hoc Western coalition to establish "a consistent and persistent" air presence over Libya, enforcing a no-fly zone, a U.S. official said.
Vice Admiral Bill Gortney, director of the U.S. military's Joint Staff, told reporters there had been no new Libyan air activity or radar emissions and had been a significant decrease in Libyan air surveillance since strikes began Saturday.
Benghazi was not yet free from threat, said Gortney, but Gaddafi's forces in the area were in distress and "suffering from isolation and confusion" after the air assaults.
A Libyan army spokesman declared a fresh ceasefire earlier on Sunday but the United States and Britain said they did not believe Gaddafi was honoring it and said they would continue to enforce the no-fly zone.
PRESSING FOR CLARITY
Senior Republicans pressed President Barack Obama to give a clear rationale for the Libya mission, reflecting concern that U.S. forces could get bogged down in a long-running, costly operation that lacks defined goals.
"The administration has a responsibility to define for the American people, the Congress and our troops, what the mission in Libya is," House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, said in a statement.
"I am concerned that the use of military force in the absence of clear political objectives for our country risks entrenching the United States in a humanitarian mission whose scope and duration are not known," added Republican Representative Howard McKeon, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee.
The United States is now fighting in three conflicts -- Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya -- while struggling under a huge budget deficit and national debt. The Pentagon also has plans to cut $78 billion in defense spending over five years.
(Additional reporting by Phil Stewart, Alister Bull, Mark Hosenball, Missy Ryan and Vicki Allen; Writing by Alistair Bell and Sean Maguire; editing by Todd Eastham)

Gates: US expects to hand off Libya lead in 'days'

ON BOARD A MILITARY AIRCRAFT – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Sunday that the U.S. expects to turn control of the Libya military mission over to a coalition — probably headed either by the French and British or by NATO — "in a matter of days."
In his first public remarks since the start of the bombings, Gates said President Barack Obama felt very strongly about limiting America's role in the operation, adding that the president is "more aware than almost anybody of the stress on the military."
"We agreed to use our unique capabilities and the breadth of those capabilities at the front of this process, and then we expected in a matter of days to be able to turn over the primary responsibility to others," Gates told reporters traveling with him to Russia. "We will continue to support the coalition, we will be a member of the coalition, we will have a military role in the coalition, but we will not have the preeminent role."
The two key possibilities, he said, are a combined British-French command or the use of a NATO command. He acknowledged there is "some sensitivity on the part of the Arab League to being seen to be operating under a NATO umbrella."
Gates' comments came as American ships and aircraft continued to pound Libya, taking out key radar, communications and surface-to-air missile sites along its Mediterranean coast. Even as his military was under siege, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi vowed to endure through a long war against what he called colonial crusader aggression by the international coalition.
The Pentagon chief had cautioned early on about getting involved in Libya's civil war, telling Congress that taking out Libya's air defenses was tantamount to war. Others have worried that the mission could put the U.S. on a path to deeper military involvement in yet another Muslim country — even as nearly 150,000 troops continue to battle in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Gates said that in the discussions leading up to the launch of attacks, he tried to provide "a realistic appreciation" of the complexities involved in setting up a no-fly zone, and noted it would require an attack on Libya — which is what happened.
He said Obama and his top advisers discussed every aspect and possible outcome of the military intervention in depth, and in the end there was unanimous support for the action taken by the president.
Asked about working with the rebels, and whether the coalition knows enough about them to forge a partnership, Gates said Libyans must ultimately resolve matters themselves — though it remains to be seen what additional outside help will be provided.
Still, he added, "We certainly know a lot about Gadhafi, and that's good enough for me."
Asked if the bombings should target Gadhafi, Gates said the coalition should stick to the objectives in the U.N. Security Council resolution, and adding new ones would create a problem. "It is unwise to set as specific goals things that you may or may not be able to achieve," he added.
He said most nations want to see Libya remain a unified state.
"Having states in the region begin to break up because of internal differences, I think, is a formula for real instability in the future."
The military assault on Libya began Saturday with the launch of about 112 Tomahawk cruise missiles from U.S. and British ships, followed by a coordinated air assault by U.S. warplanes — including Air Force B-2 stealth bombers and Marine attack jets in the pre-dawn hours.
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staffs, described the campaign's aims as "limited," saying it "isn't about seeing him (Gadhafi) go."
Gadhafi has vowed to fight on, promising a "long war," and his troops have lashed back, bombarding the rebel-held city of Misrata with artillery and tanks on Sunday, the opposition reported.