McCain, Obama moving to center on Iraq

Published: May 16, 2008 at 6:47 AM

LOS ANGELES, May 16 (UPI) -- Despite the emotion the Iraq war causes among voters, analysts say the presumptive U.S. presidential nominees have moved toward a pragmatic center on the issue.

Republican hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Democratic front-runner Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., are getting close to meeting in the middle on Iraq, with McCain saying he'd like to get troops out by 2013 and Obama pushing a plan that would withdraw all combat brigades within 18 months, the Los Angeles Times said in a report published Friday.

McCain, the Times said, has bowed to the overwhelming unpopularity of the war after once saying he could envision a U.S. military presence there for many years, while Obama is acknowledging that withdrawing from Iraq could be a costly and time-consuming undertaking.

"It's one thing to stake out a relatively uncompromising position early in the presidential process," Stuart Rothenberg, editor of the nonpartisan Rothenberg Political Report told the Times. "But when the idea that you might move into the Oval Office hits you squarely between the eyes, it reminds you that there's a time to be pragmatic about these things."

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
NHL: New Jersey 4, Ottawa 2 (9 min)
NBA: Toronto 118, New Jersey 95 (45 min)
Bundchen and Brady name baby Benjamin
Weather threat changes Ravens game time
Mangino settles with Kansas University
Woods named PGA Tour player of the year
College bowl season opens Saturday
fark
800 sheep and 40 cattle killed by Walla tip fire. BBQ trifecta is sick due to overeating
Unknown number of hogs become instabacon in farm fire. Accidental BBQ trifecta complete
Cat chewing is draining Yemen's water supply
ACLU cancels Christmas, kids devastated
Today's "Mugshot Roundup"? Watta buncha maroons
Man uses cows to defraud banks. Cops heard about it, had a beef with him and branded him a criminal....