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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jjkirk who wrote (82348)11/1/2004 1:25:45 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793838
 
Before pulling the lever

By Diana West
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Ever since Sen. John Kerry's presidential nomination was sealed with a scream (Howard Dean's), certain revelations about Life of Kerry have set off buzzers within that say there's no way this man will be president.

For example: There's no way this man who threw away his medals in protest but now says he didn't throw away his medals in protest will be president. There's no way this man who promoted a Viet Cong plan for U.S. surrender will be president. That sort of thing.

I'm calling these Kerry Gutchecks, simple facts and personal traits undecideds should think about before they pull the lever.

1) Think about John Kerry's lucky hat. Mr. Kerry keeps an old camouflage hat in his briefcase, The Washington Post reported last year. Mr. Kerry says this "good luck hat" was "given to me by a CIA guy as we went in for a special mission in Cambodia." Forget about the "global test"; this one doesn't pass the smell test.

Mr. Kerry has repeatedly spoken of his 1968 Christmas in Cambodia ("seared, seared" in his memory, as he said in the Congressional Record), but not one crew member, not even the ones who support him for president, corroborate his story of venturing into Cambodia, not at Christmas, not ever. Richard Nixon couldn't even have sent him there, as Mr. Kerry has claimed, because Richard Nixon wasn't yet in office. (President Nixon sent troops to Cambodia more than a year later, long after Mr. Kerry had returned to the United States.) Khmer Rouge couldn't have shot at Mr. Kerry, as he has claimed, because Khmer Rouge didn't take the field until 1972. There's no evidence, official or even anecdotal, that Mr. Kerry was ever in Cambodia. All of which makes that moldy old hat of his look pretty scary on a potential commander-in-chief.

2) Think of John Kerry's Vietnam reenactments. When I learned that Mr. Kerry, during his four months in Vietnam, would routinely return with his crew to scenes of skirmishes and re-enact them for a Super 8 camera (or, as his campaign prefers: "return to various locations to film one another"), I really thought the race was over. Sure, the films make ducky campaign footage — although the part where the ex-naval officer is dressed like an infantryman is plain weird — but such vain calculation is too hollow for presidential timber.

3) Think of John Kerry's annulment. A little-known fact of Mr.Kerry's life is that the senator's decision to seek an annulment from his first wife of 18 years, Julia Thorne (divorced 1988) in 1996, one year after his second marriage to Theresa Heinz Kerry. Julia Thorne, mother of Mr. Kerry's two daughters, learned of the annulment proceeding in a letter from a Catholic Church official, and told the Boston Globe in 1997 it was "disrespectful to me, it was aloof to any emotional issues, and devoid of any sense of the humanity of what this means to me and the children." On "Imus in the Morning," former altar-boy Kerry joked about the proceeding, adding, "It doesn't affect the status of the child at all. It's just in the eyes of the church."

4) We've all tried to parse Mr. Kerry's indecisive wordiness. But think about his dodgy silence. Bob Woodward has been trying since June to ask Mr. Kerry how he would have fought the Iraq war differently. He even sent his questions to the candidate. "I interviewed President Bush and he answered hundreds of detailed questions," Mr. Woodward told Fox's Bill O'Reilly this week. But not Mr. Kerry.

5) Think about having a U.N.-poodle for president. There's one thing that justifies the loss of American life, Mr. Kerry believes, and that's service to the United Nations, not the United States. "If you mean dying in the course of a United Nations effort, yes, it is worth that," Mr. Kerry said in 1994. "If you mean dying American troops unilaterally going in with some false presumption that we can effect the outcome, the answer is unequivocally no." Such non-American thinking puts the nation at risk in a post-September 11 world.

6) Think of John Kerry's supporters. From Kim Jong-Il to Yasser Arafat, from the Tehran Times to the Syria Times, John Kerry has already passed quite a global test. Recently, Malaysia's former prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad openly urged American Muslims to vote for Mr. Kerry. Remember Mr. Mohamad? As prime minister, he offered to support the United States and Britain in an international coalition against "terrorism" after September 11. But only, as he put it, "if they wanted to take action against Israel."

With friends like these, who needs a Kerry presidency?

washtimes.com



To: jjkirk who wrote (82348)11/1/2004 2:30:27 AM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793838
 
Kerry's Tora Bora Offensive Rankles Troops

Monday, November 01, 2004

foxnews.com

NEW YORK — The new videotape from Usama bin Laden (search) has added fresh life to one of John Kerry’s main points on the campaign trail — that President Bush didn’t do enough to catch the terror mastermind — but it's unclear if the tape will sway voters one way or the other.

In the campaign’s final days, Kerry continues to claim that Bush “outsourced” the job of going after bin Laden in Tora Bora (search) to Afghan warlords. But the Democrat’s charge rankles not only retired Gen. Tommy Franks, a strong Bush supporter on the campaign trail, but also Army special forces soldiers who say they searched for bin Laden in Tora Bora’s treacherous mountains.

“It was wrong to outsource the job of capturing them [bin Laden and his lieutenants] to Afghan warlords who a week earlier were fighting against us, instead of using the best-trained troops in the world who wanted to avenge America for what happened in New York and Pennsylvania and Washington,” Kerry said Saturday at a rally in Appleton, Wis.

“It was wrong to divert our forces from Afghanistan so that we could rush to war in Iraq without a plan to win the peace,” he said.

Bush casts Kerry’s comments as a blow to those in the military.

“This is an unjustified and harsh criticism of our military commanders in the field,” Bush said at a campaign stop in Greeley, Colo. “This is the worst kind of Monday-morning quarterbacking."

The back-and-forth echoed familiar themes throughout the presidential campaign but it took on new importance after the bin Laden videotape appeared Friday. In it, bin Laden took responsibility for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and spoke to the American people when he said the nation’s security was in their hands.

Franks, the military commander who led U.S. forces in Afghanistan (search) and Iraq and who after he left the Army spoke at the Republican National Convention to support Bush’s re-election, says Kerry is wrong.

“The Afghans weren't left to do the job alone,” Franks wrote in a New York Times op-ed. “Special forces from the United States and several other countries were there, providing tactical leadership and calling in air strikes. Pakistani troops also provided significant help — as many as 100,000 sealed the border and rounded up hundreds of Qaeda and Taliban fighters.”

Franks also took aim at one of Kerry’s main arguments — that Bush erred in going to war with Iraq because it took resources away from Afghanistan and the War on Terror.

“Neither attention nor manpower was diverted from Afghanistan to Iraq. When we started Operation Iraqi Freedom we had about 9,500 troops in Afghanistan, and by the time we finished major combat operations in Iraq last May we had more than 10,000 troops in Afghanistan,” Franks wrote.

Several Army special forces soldiers who served in Afghanistan told FOX News that numerous teams were deployed to the Tora Bora area to root out bin Laden and his allies. Plus, they said that Kerry was ignoring their contributions in battle.

“If you want to win a war in someone else’s backyard, you have to use locals who know the area,” one soldier told FOX News.

Another soldier told FOX News that Kerry’s promise to increase the size of the special forces was an empty one.

"He also has no idea on what it takes to double [the number of troops in] special forces. I spent 13 years in special forces and we have been trying to do just that. The only way that special forces can be doubled is to drop the qualification standards. If that happens then we all loose. The quality will be zero,” the soldier said.

On Sunday, Kerry said that if elected, the American people would see a “flurry of activity and leadership with respect to our national security interests that they’ve never seen.”

But when asked in an interview with The Associated Press to explain how he would capture bin Laden and how he would get out of the war in Iraq, the Massachusetts senator declined to go into specifics. All he would say is “I will get other people to the table.”

Surrogates for the two presidential campaigns attempted to put the bin Laden tape into a political context over the weekend. Not surprisingly, Bush aides said the tape helped Kerry while Kerry officials said it aided Bush.

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said that bin Laden made the tape to help Kerry get elected.

"Usama bin Laden would not give out a video report 72 hours before the election unless he wanted to influence it,” Thompson, a former Republican governor from Wisconsin, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in an interview.

Bin Laden "knows that John Kerry will not be a persistent individual that is after him, that is going to be out to destroy him, like he is out to destroy America," Thompson said. "We need to make sure that America is safe."

But Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell said he doubted the tape would have much of an effect but if it did, Bush would get the advantage.

“It's just another reminder of the fact that we're at war and we're fighting terrorists, and that's the only card that the president has in his hand,” Rendell, a Democrat, said on “FOX News Sunday.” “But it's obvious to me that bin Laden is trying to help George Bush, because George Bush is the best recruiter that Al Qaeda has.”

— FOX News' Heather Nauert and J. Jennings Moss contributed to this report.