Kerry
Urges Bush to Ask More Nations to Help in Iraq
Washington, Apr. 9 2004 (VOA News) -- Democratic
presidential contender John Kerry urged President
Bush Thursday to ask other nations to share
in the responsibility of rebuilding Iraq as
one response to the upsurge in violence there.
During a campaign appearance in Wisconsin, Senator
Kerry continued his criticism of the president's
handling of the situation in Iraq.
In his latest comments, the presumptive Democratic
presidential nominee said Mr. Bush should reach
out to allies for help on Iraq as a way of maximizing
the chances for success there and as a way of
minimizing the cost both in lives and money.
"Why is the United States of America almost
alone in carrying this burden and the risks,
which the world has a stake in?" he asked.
"There is no Arab country that is advanced
by a failed Iraq. No European country is made
safer by a failed Iraq. Yet those countries
are distinctly absent from the risk bearing
of this effort. Why?"
But
that view was challenged later on at a U.S.
Senate hearing where Secretary of State Colin
Powell defended the administration's efforts
to reach out not only to allies, but to the
United Nations and NATO as well. "We are
not resisting the United Nations," he said.
"The president has said clearly, he has
been saying it for quite a while, that we want
the U.N. to play a quote, vital role, unquote.
So we want the international community to be
involved. We are working on it."
In
an unexpected twist, the situation in Iraq also
crept into another major Washington event on
Thursday, the testimony of National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice before the independent
commission investigating the 2001 terrorist
attacks.
Commission member Bob Kerrey, a former Democratic
Senator from Nebraska who is no relation to
presidential contender John Kerry, decided to
raise the Iraq situation with Ms. Rice. "I
don't think we understand how the Muslim world
views this and I am terribly worried that the
military tactics in Iraq are going to do a number
of things and they are all bad (applause),"
he said. "No, please do not do that. Do
not applaud. And I think we are going to end
up with civil war if we continue down the military
operation strategy that we have in place. I
say that sincerely as someone who supported
the war in the first place."
Ms.
Rice did not respond to the comments from Mr.
Kerrey and the hearing quickly shifted back
to the September 11 attacks. But the incident
is the latest example of how concern over the
situation in Iraq has come front and center
in Washington in recent days, dominating the
attention of administration policy-makers and
members of Congress.
--
Jim Malone - Voice of America in Washington
-- Reprinted with
the permission of Voice of America
|