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NewsOctober 4, 2002

WASHINGTON -- President Bush's request for authority to use U.S. force against Iraq advanced in Congress on Thursday, with a House committee voting its approval and Senate leaders predicting wide margins of bipartisan support. "It's up to us today to send a message to the world," said Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss. He predicted Congress would give Bush the authority he wants by next week and "set in motion the beginning of the end of Saddam Hussein."...

By Tom Raum, The Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- President Bush's request for authority to use U.S. force against Iraq advanced in Congress on Thursday, with a House committee voting its approval and Senate leaders predicting wide margins of bipartisan support.

"It's up to us today to send a message to the world," said Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss. He predicted Congress would give Bush the authority he wants by next week and "set in motion the beginning of the end of Saddam Hussein."

Reflecting the Senate's determination to move ahead, the chamber then voted 95-1 on a procedural motion that clears the way for votes next week. The lone dissenter was Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va.

The Bush administration was having less success winning over the U.N. Security Council for a new resolution to disarm Baghdad.

After veto-holding Russia suggested such a resolution was unnecessary, Bush showed clear frustration with the lack of headway.

He suggested he would build a coalition of world leaders willing to join the United States against Iraq -- even if the United Nations does not. Bush did not say who would sign on, though U.S. officials mention Britain, Romania, Bulgaria, Poland, Bahrain and Kuwait among others.

The House International Relations Committee turned back efforts to weaken the resolution embraced by Bush and House leaders and approved it, 31-11, sending it to the full House for debate next week. Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill., the chairman, asked members "to support not the president but the cause that is embodied in this resolution."

Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., announced separate votes would be held next week on two alternatives that would put more limits on presidential authority.

"I think it's too early to give up on making the effort," he said. Daschle said the latest White House draft, negotiated in part by House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., was an improvement over the administration's original proposal.

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Daschle, like Lott, told Senate colleagues as debate began that he anticipated broad bipartisan support when a final vote is taken. "There is no difference of opinion with regard to our ultimate goal," Daschle said.

Senators debated the war resolution throughout the day.

Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn., who opposes it, told colleagues, "A pre-emptive, go-it-alone military strategy toward Iraq is wrong. ... Only a broad coalition of nations, united to disarm Saddam while preserving our war on terror, is likely to succeed."

Byrd, a former majority leader, condemned supporters in both parties. He said Republicans were seeking political gain and Democrats wanted a fast vote "so they can fast change the subject to domestic matters" before next month's midterm elections.

The Senate will have three choices, Daschle said:

The main White House-backed resolution. It would give Bush broad authority to use force against Iraq to enforce "relevant" U.N. resolutions, with or without U.N. cooperation. As a concession, the White House agreed to inform Congress -- either right before an attack or within 48 hours afterward -- that U.N. efforts had failed. Bush also agreed to give Congress progress reports every 60 days.

An alternative by Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Joseph Biden, D-Del., and Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., a senior member and former chairman, that would emphasize the U.N. role and specify force could be used against Iraq only to disarm it.

A proposal by Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., that would require the president to obtain U.N. approval before committing U.S. forces.

Neither the Levin measure nor the Biden-Lugar alternative was considered likely to gain enough votes to prevail, said officials in both parties.

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