WASHINGTON - Two top Republicans cast aside 
President Bush's pleas for patience on Iraq Friday and proposed legislation 
demanding a new strategy by mid-October to restrict the mission of US troops. 
The proposal, by veteran GOP Sens. John Warner of Virginia and Richard 
Lugar of Indiana, came as the Pentagon conceded a decreasing number of Iraqi 
battalions are able to operate on their own. 
"American military and diplomatic strategy in Iraq must adjust to the reality 
that sectarian factionalism is not likely to abate anytime soon and probably 
cannot be controlled from the top," the Warner-Lugar proposal states. 
 
 
 |  Sen. John Warner, 
 R-Va., meets reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington 
 in this Nov. 8, 2006 file photo. Warner 
 and Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., cast aside President Bush's pleas for patience on 
 Iraq Friday, July 13, 2007 and proposed legislation demanding a new 
 strategy by mid-October to restrict the mission of U.S. troops. 
 [AP]
 
  | 
Democrats and the White House were dismissive of the proposal. However, it 
could attract significant support from GOP colleagues who are frustrated by Iraq 
but reluctant to break ranks with their party or force the hand of a wartime 
president. 
The two senators are considered the GOP's foremost national security experts. 
Warner was the longtime chairman of the Armed Services Committee until stepping 
down last year, while Lugar is the top Republican on the Foreign Relations 
Committee. 
The legislation also draws heavily from existing GOP-backed proposals, 
increasing the chances of attracting support. 
It would require Bush to submit by Oct. 16 a plan to "transition US combat 
forces from policing the civil strife or sectarian violence in Iraq" to a narrow 
set of missions: protecting Iraqi borders, targeting terrorists, protecting US 
assets and training Iraqi forces. 
The bill suggests the plan be ready for implementation by next year. 
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid balked at the proposal because it would not 
require Bush to implement the strategy. He said he prefers legislation the 
Senate will vote on next week that would order combat troops to be out of Iraq 
by next spring. 
Warner and Lugar "put a lot of faith in the president -- that he will 
voluntarily change course and voluntarily begin to reduce the large US combat 
footprint in Iraq," said Reid spokesman Jim Manley in a statement. 
Earlier on Friday, Reid dismissed as too soft a separate proposal supported 
by several Republicans and Democrats that would require Bush to adopt the 
recommendations of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group, intended to pave the way for 
a 2008 withdrawal. 
"If you give this president a choice, he will stay hunkered down in Iraq for 
years to come," Reid, D-Nev., said. 
Bush spokesman Tony Fratto said the White House would review the Warner-Lugar 
measure. "But we believe the new way forward strategy -- which became fully 
operational less than a month ago -- deserves the time to succeed," he 
said. 
In addition to requiring a new military strategy, the legislation calls on 
Bush to seek renewed authorization for the war, which Congress gave him in 2002. 
Many members contend that the authorization -- which led to the US invasion 
of Iraq in 2003 -- was limited to approval of deposing Saddam Hussein and 
searching for weapons of mass destruction. 
Through top aides and in private meetings and phone calls, Bush has 
repeatedly asked Congress to hold off on demanding a change in the course of the 
war until September, when the top US commander, Gen. David Petraeus, and US 
Ambassador Ryan Crocker, deliver a fresh assessment of progress. 
But many Republicans, most of whom will face voters next year, say they are 
tired of the war, which is in its fifth year and has killed more than 3,600 
troops. 
In a report to Congress this week, the White House conceded that not enough 
progress was being made in training Iraqi security forces -- the linchpin 
in Bush's exit strategy for US troops. 
At a news conference Friday, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. 
Peter Pace, said the number of battle-ready Iraqi battalions able to fight 
independently has dropped from 10 to six in recent months despite an increase in 
US training efforts. 
Pace said the readiness of the Iraqi fighting units was not an issue to be 
"overly concerned" about because the problem was partly attributable to losses 
in the field. 
"As units operate in the field, they have casualties, they consume vehicles 
and equipment," Pace said. 
In another development Friday, Bush's top spokesman appeared resigned to the 
fact that the Iraqi parliament is going to take August off, even though it has 
just eight weeks to show progress on military, political and other benchmarks 
designated by the United States. 
However, Tony Snow said, "Let's also see what happens because quite often 
when parliaments do not meet, they are also continuing meetings on the side. And 
there will be progress, I'm sure on a number of fronts." 
The Warner-Lugar proposal is the first major legislative challenge to Bush's 
Iraq policy endorsed by the two senators. Lugar and Warner have previously 
expressed grave doubts about Bush's decision to send 30,000 extra troops to 
Iraq. But both remain reluctant to back binding legislation that would manage 
deployments. 
"I have great respect for the constitutional separation of powers between the 
executive and legislative branches and the authorities granted to each in that 
document," Warner said in a statement Friday.