Bush told Iraq War has helped al-Qaida

Source Telegraph (UK)

President Bush was facing increasingly blunt criticism of his Iraq policy on July 18 as a US intelligence report suggested that the war has made al-Qaida attacks on US soil more likely. Senator George Voinovich (R-OH), a close ally of Bush, delivered a withering assessment of the situation in Iraq, declaring that the Bush administration had "fucked up the war." The Ohio senator revealed that he warned Karl Rove -- the president's chief political adviser -- last week that Bush must devise a new plan for Iraq or he would vote with Democrats on Capitol Hill to withdraw troops from Iraq. He spoke out as a declassified National Intelligence Estimate of the terrorist threat to the US indicated that the Iraq War has helped al-Qaida "raise resources and to recruit and indoctrinate operatives, including for homeland attacks." The document, which represents the considered views of 16 US intelligence agencies, appeared at odds with Bush's repeated claims that the US must prosecute the war in Iraq to prevent terrorists "following us home" with attacks in the US. The three-page report, two pages of which were released to the public, argues that "al-Qaida will probably seek to leverage the contacts and capabilities of al-Qaida in Iraq." Voinovich had previously indicated that he would delay any vote to leave Iraq until September, when Gen. David Petraeus, the commander in Iraq, reports to Congress on the status of his surge strategy. But Voinovich shocked political Washington, where personal criticisms and profanity are generally muted, with the vehemence of his views -- which he stated in the halls of the senate. Voinovich, who meets Bush and his inner circle regularly, revealed that he told Rove the president must change course, or face a new mutiny. "The President is a young man and should think about his legacy. He should know history will not be kind unless he can come up with a plan that protects the troops and stabilizes the region," he said. He said other Republicans were close to speaking out against the president's current strategy. "I have every reason to believe that the fur is going to start to fly, perhaps sooner than what they may have wanted," he said. Voinovich is not the only ally of the president losing faith. The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, owned by the hitherto loyal businessman Richard Mellon Scaife, just branded the Bush administration's plans to stay the course in Iraq a "prescription for American suicide." In an editorial, the paper condemned Bush's performance at a press conference last week, in which he vowed to press on with the surge, saying "we had to question his mental stability."