Thursday, October 2, 2008

Congress Approves $162 Billion for Iraq, Afghanistan Wars

Congress gave concluding blessing to
legislation providing $162 billion for the warfares in Republic Of Iraq and
Afghanistan along with support for veteran soldiers and unemployment
benefits sought by Democrats.

The Senate voted 92-6 last nighttime to O.K. the spending
bill, which was passed by the House of Representatives last
week. It adjacent travels to President who have said he
will subscribe it.

The statute law allocates money for the warfares until mid-
2009, when Bush's replacement will be in office, and ends the 18-
month legislative conflict in which Shrub resisted Democratic
efforts to bind warfare support to demands for troop withdrawals.

''Congress have given the president everything he's asked
for'' on the war, said , senior policy analyst
for national security at the Heritage Foundation in Washington,
a policy grouping with stopping point neckties to the Republican Party.

Attempts by Democrats to coerce a backdown of U.S. troops
from Republic Of Iraq -- a cardinal issue in their successful 2006 campaign
to take control of both Chambers in United States Congress -- were thwarted by
Bush's veto pen or stymied in the Senate where the 51-49
Democratic bulk was not able to defeat Republican
opposition.

Other war-policy proposals, such as as setting political
benchmarks for the Iraki government, putting limitations on
U.S. question methods or limiting the length of troop
deployments either failed to win transition or were weakened to
allow Shrub to relinquish any requirements.

'Not About a Failure'

''This is not about a failure of the House of
Representatives,'' House Speaker said before
passage. ''It's about what we cannot acquire past the adjacent organic structure and
onto the adjacent president's desk.''

The disposal is claiming victory.

''We made no grants with respect to the supplemental
for our troops,'' White Person House Budget Director said. ''About Eighteen calendar months ago, the Democratic place was, take all of
the money and usage it to acquire out of Iraq.''

Democrats did win grants on domestic programs. The
legislation widens compensation and includes the
largest enlargement of veterans' benefits since World War II.

The unemployment compensation and veterans' benefits would
cost about $70 billion over the adjacent 11 years. Democrats also
added money for nutrient assistance and nutrient safety programs, along with
disaster finances that Shrub requested, bringing the measure's total
cost to about $187 billion over the adjacent year.

By tying their precedences to Republic Of Iraq spending, Democrats got a
victory ''bigger than any they've had before on domestic
issues,'' , a political man of science at the
University of Lone-Star State in Austin, said. ''The president did concede
more than he would have got in the past.''

To reach the newsmen on this story:
in American Capital at
;
in American Capital at

No comments: