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These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
from.Iraqi Election Day
A Resounding Success
Bush Hails Iraqi Vote as Resounding
Success
By Carol Giacomo and Adam Entous
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Bush (news - web sites) called Sunday's
landmark Iraqi election a "resounding success" and said Iraqis have
rejected the anti-democratic ideology of terrorists.
Bush, who went before television cameras to hail the voting, said: "The
people of Iraq (news - web sites) have spoken to the world, and the
world is hearing the voice of freedom from the center of the Middle
East."
But he and others acknowledged the insurgency would remain a serious
problem and some analysts warned the election for a new national
assembly could fan Iraqi political divisions. At least 35 people were
killed in militant attacks throughout the day.
"It's way too early to know what's going to come of this ... There are
huge challenges ahead of us," Sen. Carl Levin (news, bio, voting record)
of Michigan, the senior Democrat on the U.S. Senate Armed Services
Committee (news - web sites), said on CNN.
But Bush said Iraqis had sent a clear message to the insurgents.
"By participating in free elections, the Iraqi people have firmly
rejected the anti-democratic ideology of the terrorists. They have
refused to be intimidated by thugs and assassins," the president said
from the White House after the polls closed.
Although participation estimates varied, new Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites) said Iraqis defied expectations to
turn out in large numbers for the first multi-party elections in half a
century.
Presidential scholar Stephen Hess of the Brookings Institution said Bush
must be heartened by the successful voting.
"He must feel very vindicated," Hess said as he pursued his Iraq policy
against much criticism at home and abroad. "It's very hard for the
naysayers to interpret it otherwise."
But James Zogby of the Arab-American Institute warned against getting
caught up in "hyperbole" and said a new poll by his organization showed
"the election could ... end up exacerbating existing divisions."
Rice, who made a series of television appearances on Sunday, said that
while the election reflected "the emergence of an Iraqi voice for
freedom," there would be many difficult days ahead.
Bush rejected calls to delay the polls because of the violence that has
killed more than 1,400 U.S. troops since the U.S.-led invasion 22 months
ago.
Voting day was marked by a string of suicide blasts that rocked Baghdad
in rapid succession for which the Iraqi wing of al Qaeda, led by Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, claimed responsibility. A British C-130 Hercules
transport plane also went down, killing an undetermined number of
personnel.
TURNOUT ESTIMATES VARY
Rice expressed confidence that minority Sunnis, a key to Iraq's future
stability, would be included in the post-election political process.
"Every indication is that the election is going better than could have
been expected ... What we're seeing here is the emergence of an Iraqi
voice for freedom," she said.
Rice acknowledged that Iraqi turnout estimates ranged widely, with the
Iraq Electoral Commission guessing that 8 million, or 60 percent of
those registered, had voted. This would roughly compare to turnouts in
U.S. elections.
Democrats in the U.S. Congress last week accelerated calls for
withdrawing the 150,000 American troops, some immediately, others over
the next 18 months.
The Washington Post on Sunday reported that under optimal conditions
U.S. commanders anticipate being able to withdraw only about 15,000
troops in the next six to eight months.
Rice dismissed what she called "artificial timetables," saying again
that a U.S. withdrawal had "to be conditional on the situation on the
ground," including how quickly Iraqi security forces can be trained.
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