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Politics : The Donkey's Inn

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To: Mephisto who started this subject10/6/2002 3:33:18 PM
From: Mephisto   of 15516
 
" Democratic Presidential Hopefuls Differ on War in Iraq
Iowa: Two possible candidates question a military solution at a party fund-raiser; a third
tells the dovish crowd he would back use of force."


THE NATION

latimes.com

By RONALD BROWNSTEIN, TIMES STAFF WRITER

DES MOINES -- Three likely 2004 Democratic presidential candidates
differed over President Bush's policy in Iraq on Saturday night before an
audience of influential grass-roots Democratic activists openly skeptical of a
second war in the Persian Gulf.

At a fund-raising dinner for the Iowa Democratic Party, Sen. John F. Kerry
(D-Mass.)
and Vermont Gov. Howard Dean drew sustained applause with
sharp questions about the move toward war with Iraq. Sen. John Edwards
(D-N.C.) has indicated he would support a congressional resolution
authorizing Bush to use force against Iraq, but he alluded only briefly and
obliquely to that view in his speech.


Iowa is a critical
audience for the
possible Democratic
presidential contenders
because its caucus in
January 2004 will kick
off the race for the
party's nomination.
Historically, the
Democratic activists
who participate in the Iowa caucuses have leaned
toward dovish positions on national security
issues--and that inclination was evident again
Saturday night in the applause for the criticism
from Kerry and Dean. Kerry repeatedly expressed
skepticism about launching an American attack on
Iraq without broad international support--though he
never explicitly said that he would oppose a resolution authorizing Bush to invade when the Senate votes,
probably this week.

"I am prepared to hold Saddam Hussein accountable and destroy his weapons of mass destruction," Kerry
declared. "I would be willing to be the first to put my uniform back on and go defend this country. But I
don't think we should pretend that protecting the security of our nation is defined by turning our back on a
century of effort ... to build an international structure of law and to live by those standards." Kerry, citing
his experience as a Vietnam veteran, was most impassioned in defending the right of critics to ask
questions and dissent from Bush's policy.

"We need to understand that you have to ask those questions now, because you don't go to war as a
matter of first resort; you go to war as a matter of last resort," he said. Dean, who is already actively
seeking the nomination, said he feared that the nation "will engage in unwise conduct and send our
children to die without having an adequate explanation from the president of the United States." And he
argued that Bush has not fairly explained to the nation how long American troops may need to be
stationed in Iraq after a war.

"The president has never said that if we go into Iraq we will be there for 10 years to build that democracy
... and the president must tell us that before we go," Dean said. He implied that the drive toward war was
being fueled by concern over access to oil. "If we had a renewable energy policy in this country," he
charged, "we would not be sending kids to die in Iraq."
Edwards cited his support for Bush on Iraq only in
passing--and muffled it in a charge that the administration was rolling back civil liberties at home. "It is
right in my judgment to stand up to Saddam Hussein," Edwards said to notable silence. Then he drew
applause when he added: "But it is wrong in the name of war, in the name of the war on terrorism, to let
this administration take away our rights." Among the potential 2004 Democratic candidates, Dean has
most directly opposed Bush's moves toward war in Iraq. Kerry and former Vice President Al Gore have
pointedly questioned Bush's direction, while indicating they could support the use of force under some
circumstances. Edwards, House Minority Leader Richard A. Gephardt of Missouri and Sen. Joseph I.
Lieberman (D-Conn.) have said they will back Bush's push for congressional authorization to use force
against Iraq.

The evening was a testament to the cross pressures facing the potential 2004 Democratic presidential
candidates on Iraq. Though polls show the country overall would support military action against Hussein,
Democratic partisans have been much more skeptical than other Americans. And in Iowa, which
exemplifies the historic Midwestern suspicion of foreign entanglements, those sentiments are probably
stronger than elsewhere. Because the state picks its presidential delegates through a caucus, where
turnout is usually much lower than in a primary, well-organized anti-war and arms control groups have
been able to exert significant influence in years when their issues are prominent. In 1984, for instance, the
controversy over the nuclear freeze propelled George McGovern to a surprise third-place finish in the
caucus.

"Given what a small number of Democrats go to the caucus, if the peace groups organize themselves on
this issue--as they will--they can play a much larger role than people expect,"
said David W. Loebsack, a
professor of political science at Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa. In the hallways before the
dinner, the talk among the Democratic activists was overwhelmingly hostile toward the prospect of
another war with Iraq.

Democrats filing into the dinner questioned the morality, the costs and the timing of the war--often in
highly pointed language. Several said they believed Bush was manufacturing the confrontation to benefit
Republicans in the midterm elections and to divert attention from dissatisfaction over the economy. "It's so
obvious what is going on and nobody will speak up," said Richard Black, a retired professor from
Farnhamville. "It's all political, a means of keeping attention away from the economy and the stock
market."
Some argued that it was against American tradition for the U.S. to initiate a war without the
threat of an imminent attack. "The U.S. doesn't start wars; it finishes them," said Jerry Alexander from
Ames.

Others worried about the commitment the U.S. would face to reconstruct Iraq after a war. "We need to
be very cautious about getting into another conflict that could tie us up for decades," said Tom Beell, a
Vietnam veteran who teaches journalism at Iowa State University in Ames. Several of those awaiting the
speeches said they were less likely to support a candidate, such as Edwards or Gephardt, who was
backing Bush on the war. "I don't think war is a solution for anything; it just causes more problems," said
Yvonne Gaudes, a teacher from Oelwein.


Local observers say these anti-war sentiments are probably more intense among hard-core Democratic
activists than among Democrats overall--much less the state itself. Despite his support for Bush on the
war, Edwards was received at least as enthusiastically as Kerry and Dean. And its unclear whether any
rancor over Iraq would last long enough to influence a vote more than a year away. But the strength of
the emotions expressed at the dinner suggest that opposition to the war may open a vein of support among
activists for candidates critical of the war, like Dean or Gore.


Indeed, Gore--who didn't attend the dinner but is expected in the state to campaign for Democratic
congressional candidates next week--received lavish praise from several attending for his recent San
Francisco speech raising sharp questions about Bush's direction on Iraq."Quite frankly, I'm really happy
that Gore broke the ice and talked about something that was important, and I'd like to hear more of that
from the others," Black said.
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