Well, on the one hand, it would be refreshing to have a postwar plan.
Then he voted against the $87 billion appropriation, complaining that the president lacked a clear postwar plan.
Otherwise, the president received almost everything he asked for when he announced his postwar plans on Sept. 7.
He also suggested that auto companies announce their postwar plans immediately.
It is clear the Bush team had no coherent postwar plan in place.
In many ways the war plan drove the postwar plan, senior military officials said.
The report faults ambiguous interrogation mandates, an inadequate postwar plan, poor training and a lack of oversight.
The White House would, of course, argue with the assertion that it had no postwar plan.
Alas, the Bush administration's postwar political plans are even more alarming than its economic nonchalance.
Clinton - while an early critic of the troop levels, the postwar plans and all the rest - tried to stay constructive.