WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 James A. Baker III , the Republican co-chairman of a bipartisan commission assessing Iraq strategy for President Bush, said today that he expected the group to depart from Mr. Bushs call to stay the course. In an interview on the ABC News program This Week, Mr. Baker said, I think its fair to say our commission believes that there are alternatives between the stated alternatives, the ones that are out there in the political debate, of stay the course and cut and run.
Mr. Baker, who served Mr. Bushs father as secretary of state and White House chief of staff, did explicitly reject a rapid withdrawal from Iraq, which he said would only invite Iran, Syria and even our friends in the gulf to fill the power vacuum.
While heading the commission, Mr. Baker has been talking to President Bush regularly and is unlikely to issue suggestions that the president has not tacitly approved. The independent panel was requested by Congress. Today, he was asked about statements last week by the Republican chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, Senator John W. Warner of Virginia, who said Iraq was drifting sideways and urged consideration of a change of course if the Iraqi government cannot restore order in two or three months.
Asked if he agreed with that timetable, Mr. Baker said: Yes, absolutely. And were taking a look at other alternatives.
In interviews over the past two weeks, other members of the Iraq Study Group, an independent organization that came together with the reluctant blessing of the White House, have expressed concern that within months whatever course the group recommends will be overtaken by violence and other developments in Iraq.
I think the big question is whether we can come up with something before its too late, one member of the commission said late last month, after the group met in Washington. Theres a real sense that the clock is ticking, that Bush is desperate for a change, but no one in the White House can bring themselves to say so with this election coming. Its a race between our political calendar and the Iraqis.
The commission member would not speak for attribution, saying public comments should only come from Mr. Baker and his Democratic co-chairman, Lee H. Hamilton, the former congressman.