Not Quite Enough
With Democratic presidential candidates under fire for their reluctance to speak out about Iraq, Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry delivered a major policy address in San Francisco Thursday — and omitted any substantive mention of the looming war.
In a 40-minute speech to a packed hall sponsored by the Commonwealth Club of California, Kerry offered a stinging indictment of Bush domestic policies on the environment, homeland security, eroding civil liberties and the declining economy. But he saved his comments on the war for a question-and-answer session afterward, and even in those tempered remarks, his position on Iraq was less than clear-cut.
The ongoing failure of the Bush administration to win allies in the U.N. Security Council “displays some of the weakest diplomacy we’ve ever seen in the history of the continental U.S.,” Kerry said after the speech.
Although he voted last fall to authorize the president to use military force against Iraq and said Thursday that he did not regret his vote, Kerry did not say whether he still believes force should be used — or if so, when. “The United States should never go to war because it wants to go to war,” he said, echoing statements made in January. “We should go to war because we have to go to war. And that is not clear at this time.”
He did flesh out a rather fine critique, however, of the Bush administration’s handling of the diplomacy. Why he couldn’t do it in his speech is anybody’s guess, but I assume it’s because he’s afraid of Sean Hannity and Ari Fleischer:
Only one-third of the job of president is to be “CEO of the domestic choices of the country,” he said in response to one question. “Two-thirds of the job of president is head of state — therefore chief diplomat.”
And the international chaos of recent months proves the need to have a strong person in that position, he said, suggesting that neither Bush nor Secretary of State Colin Powell have measured up well in the job.
In 2002, there was clearly a path to the inspections process that brought legitimacy and consent to an international endeavor, he said. What led to its demise is an endemic unwillingness to strengthen relationships with European nations. “I don’t know if they put the lock and key on the airplane so he [Powell] isn’t allowed to travel,” Kerry said, “but somehow this has been a secretary of state who’s been unwilling to go over and build those relationships.”
“I regret the way this administration has conducted foreign policy and given the back of its hand to so many nations,” he said. “The United States, the strongest military power on the face of this planet, has not had diplomacy that matches it.”
I don’t understand why Kerry can’t just say that he is for ousting Saddam, but that they hashed it up so much and are so incredibly incompetent that the congress is going to have to assert itself like never before to ensure that they do not create complete chaos in the region, and the next president is going to have to clean up the mess that’s been made of our international relations. He should be thundering his criticism of the unilateralist bent of the administration and their inability to convince the world that the invasion scheme is the right one.
He voted for the damned war. If he’d stick to his guns and use the opportunity to show how the Republicans have compromised their own goals, he would be a principled politician that even the doves could respect. Instead, he just seems vague and scared.
People are not going to vote for a candidate who is trying to split the difference on national security.
These Democrats have got to realize that there is no margin in trying to appease the GOP. They are going to get it coming and going, no matter what they say. They have to concentrate, instead, on laying out a principled alternative to Bush Imperialism and let the chips fall where they may. The have got to step up and fight and that does not mean that they must be doves. It just means they must stand for something.
And, it’s not like the Republicans haven’t given them enough to criticize, for gawd’s sake. They’ve fucked up even on their own terms. How hard is it to make a passionate speech about Bush’s failure in international relations?