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View Full Version : kerry: The Speech the President Should Give




zimv20
Jun 28, 2005, 05:51 PM
link (http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/28/opinion/28kerry.html?hp)


By JOHN F. KERRY
Boston

TONIGHT President Bush will discuss the situation in Iraq. It's long past time to get it right in Iraq. The Bush administration is courting disaster with its current course - a course with no realistic strategy for reducing the risks to our soldiers and increasing the odds for success.

The reality is that the Bush administration's choices have made Iraq into what it wasn't before the war - a breeding ground for jihadists. Today there are 16,000 to 20,000 jihadists and the number is growing. The administration has put itself - and, tragically, our troops, who pay the price every day - in a box of its own making. Getting out of this box won't be easy, but we owe it to our soldiers to make our best effort.

Our mission in Iraq is harder because the administration ignored the advice of others, went in largely alone, underestimated the likelihood and power of the insurgency, sent in too few troops to secure the country, destroyed the Iraqi army through de-Baathification, failed to secure ammunition dumps, refused to recognize the urgency of training Iraqi security forces and did no postwar planning. A little humility would go a long way - coupled with a strategy to succeed.

So what should the president say tonight? The first thing he should do is tell the truth to the American people. Happy talk about the insurgency being in "the last throes" leads to frustrated expectations at home. It also encourages reluctant, sidelined nations that know better to turn their backs on their common interest in keeping Iraq from becoming a failed state.

The president must also announce immediately that the United States will not have a permanent military presence in Iraq. Erasing suspicions that the occupation is indefinite is critical to eroding support for the insurgency.

He should also say that the United States will insist that the Iraqis establish a truly inclusive political process and meet the deadlines for finishing the Constitution and holding elections in December. We're doing our part: our huge military presence stands between the Iraqi people and chaos, and our special forces protect Iraqi leaders. The Iraqis must now do theirs.

He also needs to put the training of Iraqi troops on a true six-month wartime footing and ensure that the Iraqi government has the budget needed to deploy them. The administration and the Iraqi government must stop using the requirement that troops be trained in-country as an excuse for refusing offers made by Egypt, Jordan, France and Germany to do more.

The administration must immediately draw up a detailed plan with clear milestones and deadlines for the transfer of military and police responsibilities to Iraqis after the December elections. The plan should be shared with Congress. The guideposts should take into account political and security needs and objectives and be linked to specific tasks and accomplishments. If Iraqis adopt a constitution and hold elections as planned, support for the insurgency should fall and Iraqi security forces should be able to take on more responsibility. It will also set the stage for American forces to begin to come home.

Iraq, of course, badly needs a unified national army, but until it has one - something that our generals now say could take two more years - it should make use of its tribal, religious and ethnic militias like the Kurdish pesh merga and the Shiite Badr Brigade to provide protection and help with reconstruction. Instead of single-mindedly focusing on training a national army, the administration should prod the Iraqi government to fill the current security gap by integrating these militias into a National Guard-type force that can provide security in their own areas.

The administration must work with the Iraqi government to establish a multinational force to help protect its borders. Such a force, if sanctioned by the United Nations Security Council, could attract participation by Iraq's neighbors and countries like India.

The deployment of capable security forces is critical, but it alone will not end the insurgency, as the administration would have us believe. Hamstrung by its earlier lack of planning and overly optimistic predictions for rebuilding Iraq, the administration has failed to devote equal attention to working with the Iraqi government on the economic and political fronts. Consequently, reconstruction is lagging even in the relatively secure Shiite south and Kurdish north. If Iraqis, particularly Sunnis who fear being disenfranchised, see electricity flowing, jobs being created, roads and sewers being rebuilt and a democratic government being formed, the allure of the insurgency will decrease.

Iraq's Sunni neighbors, who complain they are left out, could do more to help. Even short-term improvements, like providing electricity and supplying diesel fuel - an offer that the Saudis have made but have yet to fulfill - will go a long way. But we need to give these nations a strategic plan for regional security, acknowledging their fears of an Iran-dominated crescent and their concerns about our fitful mediation between Israel and the Palestinians in return for their help in rebuilding Iraq, protecting its borders, and bringing its Sunnis into the political process.

The next months are critical to Iraq's future and our security. If Mr. Bush fails to take these steps, we will stumble along, our troops at greater risk, casualties rising, costs rising, the patience of the American people wearing thin, and the specter of quagmire staring us in the face. Our troops deserve better: they deserve leadership equal to their sacrifice.

John F. Kerry is a Democratic senator from Massachusetts.

i long for the time when a president could make statements that meant something and contained particulars.



diamond geezer
Jun 29, 2005, 12:55 AM
Would Kerry have been able or allowed to make a speech like that, if he'd won the election?

Dont Hurt Me
Jun 29, 2005, 08:13 AM
This administration cant work with anyone, thats clear. Its all their way or the highway hence they have alienated not only half the U.S. but most of the worlds governments. This is what you get with a bunch of old extreme right wing farts living in the 50s. George has taken us from the year 2000 and moved us back 50 years in everything from starting cold wars,Failed Nuclear Policy to the Enviroment to a bigger government then even democrats dream for. The police state marches on to the Republican war drums. America was idiot for electing this guy twice. He dragged us into Iraq over Spin and lies and his administration knew this. Democrats are no better since most of them voted for so much of his Spin. So here is America with no one to represent them but these two clowns who Party at Our expense.

iGary
Jun 29, 2005, 08:26 AM
He voted for it.

Dont Hurt Me
Jun 29, 2005, 08:36 AM
He voted for it.
No kidding just like he voted for the UnPatriotAct. Why elect a democrat when you can get the real thing :rolleyes: Both parties suck so bad i cant stand it.

katchow
Jun 29, 2005, 01:24 PM
He voted for it.

his above statements seem to be a criticism of the administrations "handling" of the war. i'm not sure what your point is.

solvs
Jun 29, 2005, 11:55 PM
:p

Why is it that these politicians wait until after they lose to make such impassioned speeches? If only he had appeared as forceful before, he may have been the one dealing with the mess that is Iraq right now. Oh... maybe SNL was right, he did dodge a bullet there. No pun intended.

LethalWolfe
Jun 30, 2005, 12:24 AM
Why is it that these politicians wait until after they lose to make such impassioned speeches?


Nothing to lose. No demographics to worry about. No lobbies to keep happy. No hundreds of millions of people picking apart every word. Nothing to live up to. Nothing to follow through on.

And what can you do besides some Monday morning quarterbacking if you don't want to completely fall off the face of the Earth?


Lethal

katchow
Jun 30, 2005, 11:29 AM
And what can you do besides some Monday morning quarterbacking if you don't want to completely fall off the face of the Earth?


true. but a lot of his comments sound a lot like things he said sunday afternoon.

Dont Hurt Me
Jun 30, 2005, 03:03 PM
:p

Why is it that these politicians wait until after they lose to make such impassioned speeches? If only he had appeared as forceful before, he may have been the one dealing with the mess that is Iraq right now. Oh... maybe SNL was right, he did dodge a bullet there. No pun intended.I so agree, reminds me of Bob Dole. Look at him now,smiles,jovial fun to listen to but when he was running for president he was ridged ,stiff and so worried about saying something wrong he lost. I allways felt that Bob was better then he let on when running against Clinton. Kerry same thing. Be yourself.

iGary
Jun 30, 2005, 03:07 PM
his above statements seem to be a criticism of the administrations "handling" of the war. i'm not sure what your point is.

He has no gut.

QCassidy352
Jun 30, 2005, 03:46 PM
No kidding just like he voted for the UnPatriotAct. Why elect a democrat when you can get the real thing :rolleyes: Both parties suck so bad i cant stand it.

Absolutely agree. But, I do think there are still differences between the parties; they aren't equally bad, even though they both really really suck.

blackfox
Jul 1, 2005, 12:00 AM
Is it possible to divorce the author from the content?

I find Mr. Kerry's advice to be rather sound, particular and pragmatic.

What I feel about Mr. Kerry the politician or Mr Kerry the man, shouldn't matter that much should it?

It doesn't to me.

I feel comfortable saying that his comments are a damn sight better than what I heard the other night from Mr Bush.

Do I like Bush as a leader? No. If he had said something approaching what Kerry said, I would still have applauded him, however.

Who has the 'guts' again?

solvs
Jul 1, 2005, 01:13 AM
He has no gut.
I would agree, but that doesn't make him wrong. Bush being the other extreme.

mactastic
Jul 1, 2005, 12:05 PM
He has no gut.

Yeah, he looks like he's in pretty good shape to me too. ;)

katchow
Jul 1, 2005, 12:43 PM
kerry before the war

"In giving the President this authority, I expect him to fulfill the commitments he has made to the American people in recent days--to work with the United Nations Security Council to adopt a new resolution setting out tough and immediate inspection requirements, and to act with our allies at our side if we have to disarm Saddam Hussein by force. If he fails to do so, I will be among the first to speak out."

i don't know why i'm bothering to defend Kerry, guess after listening to our anti-intellectual president for so long i'm feeling some bitterness at what could have been. On a side note, just counted 9/11 mentioned 5 times in Bush's speech the other day. I sill prefer a giant douche over a sh** sandwich.