Kerry Criticizes Bush on Foreign Relations
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, April 19, 2004
PALM BEACH, Fla. – Democrat presidential candidate John
Kerry on Monday criticized President Bush's efforts to build
international relations and continued to call for bringing more
countries into the effort to stabilize Iraq.
"Every president of the last century did a better job than this
president" in building relationships with other nations, Kerry
said during a breakfast where he raised $250,000 for his campaign.
"I know I can make America stronger, safer and more secure."
One of Kerry's former rivals for the nomination, Sen. Joe
Lieberman, D-Conn., joined Kerry for a rally at Palm Beach before
Kerry took his campaign to Atlanta. Lieberman is likely to play an
important role in Kerry's bid to win the state that decided the
2000 election for Bush, largely because he has a strong following
in Florida's Jewish community.
Kerry, who contended he had a "100 percent record" in support
of Israel, said he would end what he called a "sweetheart
relationship" that allows money to flow from Arab countries to
terrorists.
"We need a president who's prepared to stand up and lead the
world to a more responsible place to create an entity to make peace
within the Middle East," he said.
During a noisy rally before thousands of students at the
University of Miami on Sunday, Kerry accused Bush of misleading not
only the country but "even members of his own administration about
what he was planning to do in Iraq."
"The American people, with respect to issues of war and peace,
are owed the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth," he
said.
Kerry sat for a one-hour interview on NBC's "Meet the Press,"
where he repeated his pledge to create 10 million jobs and cut the
deficit in half within four years if he wins the White House. He
conceded that soaring deficits might make him scale back some
proposals.
In the interview, Kerry said Bush "misled America" by rushing
to war. He pledged to build an international coalition while
continuing to prosecute the war, increasing troop levels if needed, because stability in Iraq is essential.
The problems in Iraq are only part of a foreign policy by Bush
that has left the nation isolated, Kerry said.
"I think this administration has proven, frankly, stunningly
ineffective in diplomacy," he said.
Kerry cited Bush's policy change on Israel last week in which he
endorsed a plan by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to hold on to lands
seized in the 1967 Middle East War. "There were Arab leaders that
were taken by surprise by this announcement," Kerry said, although
he also said he endorsed the move.
"I will immediately reach out to other nations in a very
different way from this administration," he said. "Within weeks
of being inaugurated I will return to the U.N., and I will rejoin
the community of nations."
Kerry rejected the suggestion that he's been inconsistent on
Iraq. He voted to authorize the use of force but against spending
an extra $87 billion on the war, a topic included in Bush campaign
commercials.
Kerry noted that Bush had threatened to veto the $87 billion
bill if it included money to pay for health care for reservists and
required Iraq to pay back some of the money set aside for its
reconstruction.
"Think of that. The president threatened to veto that bill, and
yet he is now accusing me for voting no," he said.
The Vietnam War veteran said he supports the long-term goal of
stability in Iraq, but the American public's patience may wear
thin.
"If we are stuck for a long period of time in a quagmire where
young Americans are dying without any sense of that [stability]
being able to be achieved, I think most Americans will decide
that's failure," Kerry said.
He defended his argument that the fight against terrorism
is more than just a military operation.
"You need the best intelligence, the best law enforcement
cooperation in the world," he said. "I will not hesitate to use
those forces effectively. I think I could fight a far more
effective war on terror."
Bush campaign chairman Marc Racicot responded, "This
conditional support for the troops that John Kerry voted to send to
Iraq in the first place demonstrate a disturbing lack of
judgment."
Kerry's Admitted 'Atrocities'
Asked if he stood by statements he made in 1971 about his
actions in Vietnam and those by other veterans, Kerry said he now
believed that using the word "atrocities" had been inappropriate
and excessive. His language at the time reflected his anger, he
said.
Steve Schmidt, a spokesman for Bush's re-election campaign, said
Kerry's TV appearance "was filled with inaccuracies, attacks and
pessimism toward the future of the country."
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