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Bush Hails Iraqi Vote As 'Step Forward'
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, Dec. 16, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush hailed Thursday's voting in Iraq as "a major milestone" in establishing a democratic ally for the United States in the Middle East and moving toward the day when American troops can come home.

The appearance of a buoyant Bush in the Oval Office alongside six smiling young Iraqis displaying purple-stained fingers was an attempt to capitalize on any positive news in Iraq. The parliamentary elections carried high stakes for a White House that has been confronted with increasing dissatisfaction about the war in the public arena and among many in Congress.

Bush said "there's a lot of joy, as far as I'm concerned" about the voting, and said he was happy with the turnout even without final tabulations.

"We're certain that the turnout was significant and that the violence was down," Bush said, standing in the Oval Office before a roaring fire.

There was a strong turnout in Sunni Arab areas, reinforcing U.S. hopes of seeing a stable government and calming the insurgency enough to begin withdrawing some American troops next year. Sunnis had shunned voting last January. There were expected to be delays in counting the votes.

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Sen. Lindsey Graham, in Baghdad for the voting, said he was encouraged by what he saw but it was only a step toward building a stable democracy in Iraq, and more help is needed from the international community.

"Let's don't take this election to mean the problems in Iraq are solved - really in many ways they're just beginning," Graham, R-S.C., said Thursday in an interview with NBC's "Today" show.

"We've got a second chance on life here after this election," he said. "Look at this election as a chance to re-engage and learn from our mistakes."

Bush had a more upbeat take.

"This is a major step forward in achieving our objective, which is ... having a democratic Iraq, a country able to sustain itself and defend itself, a country that will be an ally in the war on terror and a country that will set such a powerful example to others in the region, whether they live in Iran or Syria, for example," he said.

He congratulated Iraqis for "refusing to be cowed into not voting" and assured them the United States would stick with the mission there "until we complete this job."

"They don't have to worry. We're doing the right thing," he said.

A day earlier, Bush warned that the elections would be "followed by days of uncertainty," with final results perhaps not to be available until early January and violence not expected to wane.

The Iraqis who came to the White House to stand by the president's side voted in the United States; the purple ink on their fingers has become the standard mark in Iraq to ensure against multiple voting.

Also in Baghdad, Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., said the hard part for the Iraqis would come after the vote - forming a government and possibly amending the constitution.

"The bottom line is they still need us here," Biden told CBS' "The Early Show." "But the key to this is not a military solution. It's a political solution."

Iraqis need to write a constitution that the nation's disparate groups can accept. If they don't, Biden said, "all the troops in America will not be able to hold this country together."

© 2005 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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