Calling for a firm timeline for withdrawal of US troops from Iraq, Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards responds to President Bush's speech on Iraq, televised earlier this evening:
The New York Times has the full text of the president's message. Video highlights from the speech are below:
On the blogs, AmericaBlog has reactions from Democratic leaders Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi, and Andrew Sullivan pipes in with a seminal comment on the Bush message in A Humbled President:
He seemed almost broken to me. His voice raspy, his eyes watery, his affect exhausted, his facial expression almost bewildered. I thought I would feel angry; but I found myself verging toward pity. The case was so weak, the argument so thin, the evidence for optimism so obviously strained that one wondered whom he thought he was persuading. And the way he framed his case was still divorced from the reality we see in front of our nose: that Iraq is not, as he still seems to believe, full of ordinary people longing for democracy and somehow stymied solely by "extremists" or al Qaeda or Iran, but a country full of groups of people who cannot trust one another, who are still living in the wake of unimaginable totalitarian trauma, who have murdered and tortured and butchered each other in pursuit of religious and ethnic pride and honor for centuries. This is what Bush cannot recognize: there is no Iraq.
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
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