Associated PressDemocratic senators maintained Tuesday that President Bush's request for an additional $87 billion, mostly for Iraq, buttresses contentions the administration seriously miscalculated the cost of going to war there.
At a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing, the panel's top Democrat, Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, noted that the administration had rejected estimates before the war that an Iraq conflict could cost $100 billion to $200 billion. The new $87 billion request is in addition to the $79 billion that Congress approved last spring.
Addressing Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, Levin said "you told Congress in March that 'we are dealing with a country that can really finance its own reconstruction and relatively soon.' Talk about rosy scenarios," Levin said. ---
Democrats are using the money request to argue that the administration didn't plan adequately for the war's aftermath, was overly optimistic about Iraqi and international cooperation and foolishly pushed through tax cuts even as the war aggravated a growing deficit. ---