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Obama in Union Leader op-ed: Five Years after Iraq Vote, We're Still Foolishly Rattling Our Sabers

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flpoljunkie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 09:04 AM
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Obama in Union Leader op-ed: Five Years after Iraq Vote, We're Still Foolishly Rattling Our Sabers
Five years after Iraq war vote, we're still foolishly rattling our sabers

By SEN. BARACK OBAMA

ON THE FIFTH anniversary of the Senate's vote to authorize an open-ended war in Iraq, we should resolve to never repeat the terrible mistake of launching a misguided war. But unfortunately, the Senate risked doing exactly that when it recently opened the door to an extension and escalation of the ongoing war in Iraq to include military action against Iran.

There is no doubt that Iran poses a threat. It has armed terrorists beyond its borders, maintains an illicit nuclear program, and its leaders have issued belligerent threats that are a concern to us all. But our first and most important avenue to contain Iranian aggression is to try the tough and direct diplomacy that the Bush administration has too often disdained. Instead of encouraging that diplomacy, an amendment passed last month by the Senate could be used by the President as justification to strike Iran under the authority granted to him by the 2002 Iraq war resolution.

The amendment, offered by Sens. Joe Lieberman and Jon Kyl, directly links the ongoing war in Iraq -- including our troop presence -- to checking the threat from Iran. The amendment opens with 17 findings that highlight Iranian influence within Iraq. It then states that we have to "transition(s) and structure" our "military presence in Iraq" to counter the threat from Iran, and states that it is "a critical national interest of the United States" to prevent the Iranian government from exerting influence inside Iraq.

Why is this so dangerous? The Bush administration could use language like this to justify a continued troop presence in Iraq as long as it perceives a threat from Iran. Even worse, the Bush administration could use the language in Lieberman-Kyl to justify an attack on Iran as a part of the ongoing war in Iraq.

As my colleague Sen. Joe Biden, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said in opposing the amendment, "I do not want to give the President and his lawyers any argument that Congress has somehow authorized military actions."

He is exactly right. Because as we learned with the original authorization of the Iraq war -- when you give this President a blank check, you can't be surprised when he cashes it.

I strongly differ with Sen. Hillary Clinton, who was the only Democratic presidential candidate to support this reckless amendment. We do need to tighten sanctions on the Iranian regime, particularly on Iran's Revolutionary Guard, which sponsors terrorism far beyond Iran's borders. But this must be done separately from any unnecessary saber-rattling about checking Iranian influence with our "military presence in Iraq." Above all, it must be done through tough and direct diplomacy with Iran, which I have supported, and which Sen. Clinton has called "naive and irresponsible."

Sen. Clinton says she was merely voting for more diplomacy, not war with Iran. If this has a familiar ring, it should. Five years after the original vote for war in Iraq, Sen. Clinton has argued that her vote was not for war -- it was for diplomacy, or inspections. But all of us knew what the Senate was debating in 2002. John Edwards has renounced his own vote for the war, and he should be applauded for his candor. After all, we didn't need to authorize a war in order to have United Nations weapons inspections. No one thought Congress was debating diplomacy. No newspaper headlines ran on Oct. 12, 2002, reading, "Congress authorizes diplomacy." This was a vote to authorize war, and without that vote, there would have been no war.

America needs a leader who will make the right judgments about matters as grave as war and peace, and America needs a leader who will be straight with them. When I spoke out against going to war in Iraq in 2002, I knew that I was putting my political career on the line. Going to war was popular; so was President Bush. But I felt strongly that a war in Iraq would lead to an open-ended and destructive occupation of Iraq, and weaken us in the fight against al-Qaida in Afghanistan. And I felt a responsibility to say so.

Now, the Senate has once again voted for an amendment that goes out of its way to draw connections between distinct threats, and that replaces judicious policy-making with unnecessary saber-rattling. And once again, we hear that it is not really a vote for more war, it is a vote for more diplomacy.

But the way to support diplomacy is to actually pursue it, which is what I have called for in this campaign. Not the ad hoc Bush-Cheney diplomacy of not talking to people we don't like, but real, direct, and sustained diplomacy that exhausts all of our options instead of rushing to war.i

In choosing their next President, the American people need to look at the judgments each of the candidates has made on war in the past, and at who has clearly learned the lessons of this disastrous war going forward.

This is not a debate about 2002; it's about the future, and in that debate I can run on, and not from, my record.

http://www.unionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=Sen.+Barack+Obama%3a+Five+years+after+Iraq+war+vote%2c+we%27re+still+foolishly+rattling+our+sabers&articleId=a41d44e5-0c56-4353-b9f6-5eda09c81236
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aquart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 09:08 AM
Response to Original message
1. Fair statement.
Clinton and Edwards earned it.
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SaveElmer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 09:16 AM
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2. Hey Barack...
If it is so awful why were you co-sponsoring an amendment that did the exact same thing 6 months earlier...

And oh, if it was so important to you that Kyl-Lieberman not pass...why did you not deem it important enough for you to vote on...

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geek tragedy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 09:37 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Please don't misrepresent votes.
The amendment Obama co-sponsored did not link containing Iran to the conflict in Iraq. Which is the entire point of this op-ed.

Harry Reid took the bill off the schedule. Obama left town. Then Reid put it on for a vote. Obama issued a statement stating how he would have voted.

Too bad Hillary didn't get the chance to piggy-back off his vote like she's done for every other vote.
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flpoljunkie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 11:21 AM
Response to Original message
4. Clinton camp responds. Has that decided nasty ring of Bush flacks responding to John Kerry.
Edited on Thu Oct-11-07 11:29 AM by flpoljunkie
Politico's Ben Smith

Clinton responds to Obama op-ed

The exchanges between the Clinton and Obama campaigns are becoming more direct today, with Clinton spokesman Phil Singer responding sharply to Obama's op-ed on Iran in this morning's Union Leader. It's a response — like most of Clinton's — that's at least as focused on casting Obama as just another politician — and just another guy attacking Hillary — as on the substance of the argument:

It's unfortunate that Sen. Obama is abandoning the politics of hope and embracing the same old attack politics as his support stagnates. Sen. Obama is well aware that Sen. Clinton was one of the first to say George Bush must get explicit congressional authority before attacking Iran and is the sole co-sponsor of legislation forbidding the president from expending any money on military action there without Congressional approval. Sen. Obama’s attacks won’t bring change, but Sen. Clinton’s strength and experience will.

http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/1007/Clinton_responds_to_Obama_oped.html

(I would add that the legislation Clinton's flack refers to above is Senator Webb's amendment. Webb reported that he heard about Hillary signing up as a co-sponsor of his amendment just like we did--on the tube. Undoubtedly, a desperate CYA move on her part.)
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