Kerry’s Red Meat Speech
A couple weeks ago, I said this in defense of John Kerry’s view on the Iraq war :
The GOP wants to convince voters that there’s no difference between Kerry or Bush on Iraq, because they know that undecideds will hesitate to go for a challenger who doesn’t differ drastically from the incumbent. Their goal is to subconsciously convince voters that every mistake Bush made was inevitable and that the only decision-making process that should be examined is that one that took place on the floor of the senate…If Kerry’s lame decision to back the Iraq war resolution should be held up to scrutiny, so should every decision that Bush made regarding the war’s planning and execution.
Well, it looks like the Kerry campaign and I are on the same wavelength, because today Kerry hit back hard :
President Bush 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.So when the president says we have the same position on Iraq, I have to respectfully disagree. Our differences couldn?t be plainer. And I have set them out consistently. When it comes to Iraq, it?s not that I would have done one thing differently, I would?ve done almost everything differently.
I would have relied on American troops in Tora Bora when we had Bin Laden in our sights. I never would have diverted resources so quickly from Afghanistan before finishing the job.
I would?ve given the inspectors the time they needed to do the job.
I wouldn?t have ignored my senior military advisors.
I would?ve made sure that every soldier put in harm?s way had the equipment and body armor they needed.
I would have built a strong, broad coalition of our allies around the world.
And, if there?s one thing I learned from my service, I would never have gone to war without a plan to win the peace.
The bottom line is that if I don?t believe we had to be shouldering nearly the entire financial cost of this war ? more than $200 billion ? and shortchanging investments in education, health care, and our safety at home.
But the question now is not just what we should have done, but what we can and must do now in Iraq. We do not need what President Bush has called “catastrophic success.? We need real success.
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. And together, we need to more rapidly train Iraqi police and military to take over the job of protecting their 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.
In an interview two days ago, the President said we can?t win the war on terror. I absolutely disagree. With the right policies, this is a war we can win, this is a war we must win, and this is a war we will win.
While I wasn’t quite as nervous as many on the left about Kerry’s MIA status between the end of the Dem convention and now, I really hope this is the start of a two month long assault on Bush’s record and not another one of those flashes of brilliance that he never really follows up on.
one comment so far
Copy link for RSS feed for comments on this post
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.


I would like to see Kerry point out that while Bush doesn’t need the world’s permission to protect American, he does need Dick Cheney and Karl Rove’s permission to do anything. The fact that he is totally controlled by others is clearly obvious and hasn’t been brought forward. It is time to take off the gloves and play as dirty as them. It is a winning strategy and something the God fearing, family values republicans have never hesitated to use. John, give Howard Dean a call.
Comment by Becky — September 2, 2004 @ 6:32 am