House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi speaks to reporters June 16 on Capitol Hill in Washington. 
President Obama is facing an insurgency -- from his own party -- over his plan to withdraw more than 30,000 troops from Afghanistan by the end of next summer. 
While some Republicans are nervous about the  possibility of a precipitous drawdown, a number of prominent Democrats  criticized the president for not bringing the troops home quickly  enough.
Underscoring the difficulty the president will have keeping Congress on board for a war that is expected to last well beyond his current term in office, that criticism is coming from the top down in the Democratic caucus.
Underscoring the difficulty the president will have keeping Congress on board for a war that is expected to last well beyond his current term in office, that criticism is coming from the top down in the Democratic caucus.
House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi gently, but clearly, chided the president over his Afghanistan announcement Wednesday night. 
"It has been the hope of many in Congress  and across the country that the full drawdown of U.S. forces would  happen sooner than the president laid out -- and we will continue to  press for a better outcome," she said in a statement. 
That was as anti-war Rep. Barbara Lee,  D-Calif., vociferously condemned the president's plan, calling for the  "swift withdrawal" of 50,000 combat troops. 
"This is far from the sizable and significant reduction that the American people were expecting," she said. 
Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md., also said the withdrawal "should be sped up." 
Under the president's plan, 10,000 troops  will be withdrawn by the end of this year. Obama said the rest of the  surge troops, or about 23,000, will be removed by the end of summer in  2012. It is expected that all surge troops will be out of Afghanistan by  September next year. 
As the president faces bipartisan pressure  to get out of Afghanistan, he also faces bipartisan pressure not to  leave too quickly. 
Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., chairman of the  House Intelligence Committee, expressed concern that the withdrawal plan  would put too much of a burden on the remaining troops and "increase  risk in a number of areas." 
House Speaker John Boehner said Wednesday he'd be "concerned about any precipitous withdrawal" from Afghanistan. 
"We all want to bring our troops home as  quickly as possible, but we must ensure that the gains we've made are  not jeopardized," Boehner said after the speech, urging the president to  take into account the advice of commanders on the ground. 
Sen. Bill Nelson,  D-Fla., in a YouTube video cut before the president's speech, said  Obama has "the right idea about starting a withdrawal" without allowing  "the terrorists to gain safe haven elsewhere in the region." 
The president, in framing the drawdown, tried to appeal to competing factions on Capitol Hill  and elsewhere over the war. To those urging the president to cut the  mission short and withdraw forces at a more rapid pace, Obama affirmed  that his interest is "nation-building here at home," not in  Afghanistan. 
"We won't try to make Afghanistan a perfect  place. We will not police its streets or patrol its mountains  indefinitely," he said. 
But to those concerned the impending withdrawal could leave Kabul ill-equipped to keep the Taliban at bay and extremist elements out, Obama vowed not to let Afghanistan again become a "safe haven" for terrorists. 
He touted the recent death of Usama bin Laden as a "victory for all who have served since 9/11," and he claimed intelligence recovered from the terror leader's Pakistan compound revealed that Al Qaeda  is under "enormous strain." Obama said bin Laden had expressed concern  that Al Qaeda could not replace senior leaders who were killed and was  struggling "to portray America as a nation at war with Islam."

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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