Ex-Cabinet members advise Bush
He hears criticism, ideas for improvements in Iraq
President Bush, second from left, meets with present and former secretaries of state and defense in the White House Thursday. By meeting with the group, Bush is pressing ahead with a public relations offensive on the unpopular military mission in Iraq.
Evan Vucci, Associated Press
WASHINGTON President Bush held another meeting about Iraq on Thursday, though this one featured something unusual: critics.
Former Clinton administration diplomat Madeleine Albright and other Democrats came to the White House in a group of 13 former secretaries of State and Defense, as Bush continued new outreach on the thorny topic of Iraq.
"Not everybody around this table agreed with my decision to go into Iraq, I fully understand that," Bush said in the Roosevelt Room. "But these are good solid Americans who understand that we've got to succeed now that we're there."
Albright and others said they offered a variety of suggestions for improvements in Iraq. Albright said she told the president that Iraq was "a war of choice, not of necessity," but now "getting it right is a necessity, not a choice."
Even some of the Republicans there had questions for the president: "Some of the things he heard he probably didn't like too well," said Melvin Laird, Defense secretary for President Nixon and author of a recent piece in the magazine "Foreign Affairs" in which he said Bush had done "an uneven job of selling his (Iraq) message."
White House spokesman Scott McClellan called the meeting "part of the effort to broaden the outreach."
Faced with falling public approval ratings for his presidency and for the war, Bush launched a series of speeches and events that began with the Nov. 30 release of a new "Strategy For Victory" in Iraq. He has provided statistics that he says show that Iraq's security, infrastructure and political development are improving. But he has also admitted mistakes and setbacks since the March 2003 invasion.
Polls show about half of Americans think the war was a mistake, and fewer than half 42 percent in a Dec. 16-18 USA Today/CNN/Gallup Poll say Bush has a plan to achieve victory in Iraq.
Critics have accused Bush of having a secretive and narrow management style, restricting himself to a tight circle of advisers. Lawrence Wilkerson, chief of staff to former secretary of State Colin Powell, attributed the decision to invade Iraq and other actions to a small "cabal" led by Vice President Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
Wilkerson, who did not attend Thursday's meeting and has emerged as a critic of the administration since leaving the State Department, said Bush's outreach effort is in part an attempt "to send a signal the administration is not so insular." But, he added, "whether that really means he's opening up, I doubt seriously."
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