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2004 US Presidential Election
September 08, 2004
Kerry | Text of Kerry Speech on Iraq War
Senator Kerry spoke this morning in Cincinnati, Ohio, seeking to commemorate the 1,000th American death in Iraq by laying out his position on the war there. I’ve excerpted the text of his foreign policy remarks, which his website captions Remarks on Bush’s Wrong Choices in Iraq That Have Left Us Without the Resources We Need at Home: Yesterday in Iraq, we marked the most incalculable loss of all. Yesterday, we reached a tragic milestone. More than 1,000 of America’s sons and daughters gave their lives in service to our country. More than 1,000 sons and daughters, husbands and wives, brothers and sisters who will never come home to live the lives they dreamed of. We honor them, we pray for them and for their families, and we owe it to their memory and all our troops to do what’s right in Iraq. I also want to speak directly to the more than 150,000 troops currently risking their lives as far away as Iraq and Afghanistan. Your country is proud of you. You are the most dedicated, capable military we’ve ever had. We are united as a nation in our support for you. We pledge to stand with your families as you stand on the front lines for ours. You are the best of America. And you perform magnificently every day. We thank you for your service and your sacrifice. Twenty-three months ago, President Bush came here to ask the American people for our support. And he promised then to make the right choices when it came to sending young Americans to Iraq. Here in Cincinnati, he said that if Congress approved the resolution giving him the authority to use force, it did not mean that military action would be “unavoidable”. But he chose not to give the weapons inspectors the time they needed to get the job done and give meaning to the words, going to war as a last resort. Here in Cincinnati, he promised “to lead a coalition.” But he failed to build a broad, strong coalition of allies and he rushed to war without a plan to win the peace. Here in Cincinnati, from this hall, on that night, he spoke to the nation, and promised: “If we have to act, we will take every precaution that is possible. We will plan carefully. We will act with the full power of the United States military. We will act with allies at our side and we will prevail.” But then, George W. Bush made the wrong choices. He himself now admits he miscalculated in Iraq. In truth, his miscalculation was ignoring the advice that was given to him, including the best advice of America’s own military. When he didn’t like what he was hearing, he even fired the Army Chief of Staff. His miscalculation was going to war without taking every precaution and without giving the inspectors time. His miscalculation was going to war without planning carefully and without the allies we should have had. As a result, America has paid nearly 90% of the bill in Iraq. Contrast that with the Gulf War, where our allies paid 95% of the costs. George W. Bush’s wrong choices have led America in the wrong direction in Iraq and left America without the resources we need here at home. The cost of the President’s go-it-alone policy in Iraq is now $200 billion and counting. $200 billion for Iraq, but they tell us we can’t afford after-school programs for our children. $200 billion for Iraq, but they tell us we can’t afford health care for our veterans. $200 billion for Iraq, but they tell us we can’t afford to keep the 100,000 new police we put on the streets during the 1990s. Well we’re here today to tell them: they’re wrong. And it’s time to lead America in a new direction. When it comes to Iraq, it’s not that I would have done one thing differently from the President, I would’ve done almost everything differently. I would have given the inspectors the time they needed before rushing to war. I would have built a genuine coalition of our allies around the world. I would’ve made sure that every soldier put in harm’s way had the equipment and body armor they needed. I would’ve listened to the senior military leaders of this country and the bipartisan advice of Congress. And, if there’s one thing I learned from my own service, I would never have gone to war without a plan to win the peace. I would not have made the wrong choices that are forcing us to pay nearly the entire cost of this war – $200 billion that we’re not investing in education, health care, and job creation here at home. $200 billion for going-it-alone in Iraq. That’s the wrong choice; that’s the wrong direction; and that’s the wrong leadership for America. While we’re spending that $200 billion in Iraq, 8 million Americans are looking for work – 2 million more than when George W. Bush took office – and we’re told that we can’t afford to invest in job training and job creation here at home. [I’m skipping the domestic-policy sections, but you can read the whole thing at Kerry’s site] Because of this President’s wrong choices, we’re spending $200 billion in Iraq while the costs of health care have gone through the roof and we’re told we don’t have the resources to make health care affordable and available for all Americans . . . . . . They’re charging 17% more for Medicare while making America pay $200 billion for a go-it-alone policy in Iraq. That’s the wrong choice; that’s the wrong direction; and that’s the wrong leadership for America. [snip] Because of George W. Bush’s wrong choices, we’re spending $200 billion in Iraq while we’re running up deficits that threaten Social Security. In fact, they’re raiding the Social Security Trust Fund to pay for their mistakes in Iraq. . . . [snip] And because of this President’s wrong choices, we’re spending $200 billion in Iraq instead of investing in making America energy independent. George W. Bush’s energy policy is to trust the big oil companies and the Saudis. In fact, a national news magazine just reported that a senior member of the Saudi Royal family said that as far as they’re concerned, in the U.S. Presidential election, “It’s Bush all the way.” I want an America that relies on its own ingenuity and innovation, not the Saudi Royal Family. We’re going to invest in technology and the vehicles of the future, so that no young American will ever be held hostage to our dependence on oil from the Middle East. That’s the right choice; that’s the right direction; and that’s the right leadership for America. Because of this President’s wrong choices, we’re spending $200 billion in Iraq while we’re told that we can’t afford to do everything that we should for homeland security. I believe it’s wrong to be opening firehouses in Baghdad and closing them down in the United States of America. It’s wrong to cut money for our first responders. It’s wrong to let 95% of the cargo that comes into this country get by without ever being physically inspected. That’s the wrong choice; that’s the wrong direction; and that’s the wrong leadership for America. As President, I will set a new direction. We’re going to defend this country here at home. We’re going to do all we possibly can to protect it from another terrorist attack. And we’re going to make homeland security a priority, not a political slogan. My friends, today we are bearing the cost of the war in Iraq almost alone – $200 billion and counting. Nearly two years after George W. Bush spoke to the nation from this very place, we know how wrong his choices were. He says he “miscalculated.” He calls Iraq a “catastrophic success.” But a glance at the front pages or a look at the nightly news shows the hard reality: Rising instability. Spreading violence. Growing extremism. Havens for terrorists that weren’t there before. And today, even the Pentagon admits, Entire regions of Iraq are controlled by insurgents and terrorists. I call this course a catastrophic choice that has cost us $200 billion because we went it alone, and we’ve paid an even more unbearable price in young American lives. We need a new direction. I know what we need to do in Iraq. We need to bring our allies to our side, share the burdens, reduce the cost to American taxpayers, and reduce the risk to American soldiers. We need to train Iraqi military and police – we need to train them more rapidly, more effectively, and in greater numbers to take over the job of protecting their own country. That’s what I’ll do as Commander-in-Chief – because that’s the right way to get the job done and bring our troops home. [snip] Posted by Baseball Crank at September 8, 2004 11:50 AM | TrackBack Comments
The Kerry Speech! And everything Bush has done was & is wrong! ThomasChrist Posted by: ThomasChrist blah,blah,blah. How can any intelligent person listen to this man. He has done more damage to the democratic party than Jimmy (chicken %^&$&) Carter. Johnny boy Kerry has more positions on every issue than does the Komasutra. I do not always agree with our president, but at least I know where he stands. This is one life long democrat that will vote for Bush. We need to tell the Washington/ Mass. liberials that you do not represent our party….Its time for a change, not for president, but for our party. Posted by: jhaley Let’s take a look at the miscalculation, shall we? The President said the miscalculation was that the initial phase of the war went faster than anticipated. Now who were the people who said it was going to go slowly? The quagmire crowd Kerry said Bush should have listened to more. That being said, given 20/20 hindsight was there any way to prevent the insurgency blending into the civilian populace? Not unless you changed the date of the invasion which was the true miscalculation in my opinion. The problem was that Saddam had time to plan the insurgency. If we had gone in EARLIER we would have had less problems and maybe we would have found the WMD before they were shipped off to Syria. So, given what we have learned from our mistakes would CinC Kerry have done a better job? No. Because: 1. He would have sided with the group who were the source of the miscalculation concerning the efficiency of the invasion. 2. He would have gone in even later, giving Saddam to plan even more and possibly fighting in the full heat of summer with chemical suits on which would have caused even more deaths. Posted by: Rich Blinne What’s that in the background? It sounds like . . . somebody singing a tune. Like a fat lady singing a tune. Listen! Do you hear that? It sounds like Linda Ronstadt, and she’s singing “Desparado”! Posted by: TL Let me get this straight. He’s talking about the war that he recently said that he would have voted in favor of even knowing what he knows now? But it’s the “wrong war.” How… nuanced. Does he really expect anyone to vote for him?! Posted by: Bostonian What kills me is that no one has bothered to explain to Kerry that he’s going to lose this election by trying to define GWB as “wrong.” It’s September. Everyone inclined to perceive Bush as incompetent already does so. Everyone not so inclined is not going to be convinced by a speech like this which, if you actually read it, is simply a bunch of negative assertions. It’s simply insufficient for Kerry to “oppose” Bush. He has to actually articulate something positive for voters to choose. Even if it is something as insipidly moronic as the unspecified “change” that Bill Clinton ran on in 1992, Kerry actually has to develop something. :jackson Posted by: jackson zed He has to actually articulate something positive for voters to choose. Bingo Jackson! I believe that is why Bush got such a good bounch from the Republican Convention. He focused mostly on the positive and that is what voters want to hear. I listened to the Dems convention of Hope is on the way and I couldn’t find any message of hope anywhere. That’s evidently why Carvell has been hired (volunteer hours do count) to find the hope and send it on its way. Posted by: TexasGal WASHINGTON (AP) - Democrat John Kerry sought to link the Iraq war to U.S. economic woes on Wednesday, calling President Bush’s move against Baghdad a “catastrophic choice” that so far has drained $200 billion in needed resources at home. I went to the BLS site to check it out. Since the start of the Iraq war, 1.561 million jobs were created. That’s just AWFUL. :-) Posted by: Rich Blinne Post a comment
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