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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Hawaii delegates react to report

 •  'Surge' rollback can begin, Petraeus says

By Dennis Camire
Advertiser Washington Bureau

Hawai'i's congressional delegation, which has called for U.S. troops to be withdrawn from Iraq, were not swayed by Gen. Petraeus' testimony.

  • Sen. Daniel K. Inouye: He said the Iraq war was supposed to be a pre-emptive strike in the war on terrorism but has devolved into a civil war and an al-Qaida recruitment tool.

    "We need a new direction," said Inouye, who voted against giving President Bush the authority to go to war in 2002. "That new direction, as I have advocated earlier, is a phased redeployment of troops from Iraq with us leaving the battlefield with honor."

  • Sen. Dan Akaka: He said the administration's war plan was not working and a new direction was needed.

    "The Iraqi government must take more responsibility for ensuring their nation's own security," said Akaka, who also voted against the war resolution in 2002. "A phased redeployment of U.S. troops will give the Iraqi security forces the primary combat role in protecting and defending their own nation."

    The United States cannot continue "indefinitely squandering its resources and its soldiers' lives," said Akaka, who, like all other members of the Hawai'i delegation, is a Democrat.

    "It is time to put the future of Iraq in the hands of the Iraqi people and their elected leaders," he said.

  • Rep. Mazie Hirono: She said she continues to support the withdrawal of U.S. troops.

    "Our men and women in uniform have accomplished everything asked of them in Iraq and everything they are capable of," she said. "Even if the troop surge has had limited success in improving security in some areas of Iraq, the surge is not sustainable over time and has not accomplished its goal, which was to provide an opportunity for Iraq to make necessary political progress."

  • Rep. Neil Abercrombie: He said that lost in Petraeus' statistics was "a very simple yet heartbreaking fact" that the number of troops killed so far this year — 740 — has increased from the 462 killed from January through August 2006.

    "We are in a situation in which we're saying there is only one plan for Iraq, militarily speaking — indefinite occupation by U.S. troops," said Abercrombie, who also voted against the 2002 war resolution and is a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee. "We are occupying that country politically and militarily and we are going to suffer the results."

    Reach Dennis Camire at dcamire@gns.gannett.com.