Would Kerry Have Invaded Iraq?
by Jude
Wanniski
by Jude Wanniski
Memo
To: Political Editors
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: What He Really Said
On August 9, my wife and I were floating around on a cruise ship
in the South Pacific, almost completely cut off from the news of
the day. It was not until I returned to the states later in the
month that I learned President Bush that day told supporters in
Virginia he still would have gone to war based on the evidence at
hand at the time, and he challenged Kerry to say whether he would
have cast the same vote. I was then amazed to learn of reports that
Kerry said he would have voted the same way even if he knew then
about Iraq what he now knows! I was amazed because Kerry could
hardly engage the President on the necessity for the war against
Iraq if that is what he actually said. Even the President has not
gone that far. Where did this come from? It came from Mr. Bush,
who responded to Kerry’s real answer in defending his vote in October
2002 on what he knew at the time, not what he knows now.
Here is the Bush response:
My
opponent has found a new nuance. He now agrees it was the right
decision to go into Iraq. After months of questioning my motives
and even my credibility, Senator Kerry now agrees with me that
even though we have not found the stockpile of weapons we believed
were there, knowing everything we know today, he would have voted
to go into Iraq and remove Saddam Hussein from power.
Indeed, I checked
around and found Kerry never said anything of the sort. He of course
voted to authorize the use of force against Iraq if the President
took the issue to the United Nations and exhausted the diplomatic
remedies before sending troops to disarm Saddam. Given the fact
that practically everyone believed Saddam might have WMD and had
been connected to Al Qaeda, Kerry’s support for the resolution was
a reasonable one.
I was totally opposed to a war at the time because I believed Iraq
had in fact rid itself of its weapons of mass destruction and WMD
programs in 1991. I also believed Baghdad had no relations with
Osama bin Laden or Al Qaeda. Yet I saw that the Senate vote was
a victory for Secretary of State Colin Powell, who was eager to
get the issue into the UN at a time when the neo-con warhawks were
urging pre-emptive war on Iraq without asking UN involvement at
all. We had invaded Afghanistan after 9-11 without asking UN support
and the neo-cons thought Iraq could be handled the same way, as
another battle in the “war on terrorism.” In order to get the support
of Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle and Senator Kerry (who was
already being seen as a presidential candidate in 2004), the President
also agreed that if UN diplomacy failed, he would so certify in
letters to the House and Senate, but would need no further authorization
from Congress.
As it happened, the UN Security Council responded to the President’s
appeal by passing UNSCRes #1441 with a 15-to-0 vote, which called
upon Saddam to submit to unconditional inspections by the UN’s UNMOVIC
and IAEA agencies or suffer unspecified consequences. The record
is clear that Baghdad did everything asked of it, as Saddam knew
if he didn’t there would be a war that would end his regime. The
inspectors spent the next few months scouring Iraq for any trace
of WMD and found nothing. The CIA even gave the inspectors a hundred
places to look, but in every case nothing was found. Undeterred,
the Bush administration insisted WMD programs were hidden so well
the UN could not find them and only war a US led inspection team
would find them. The President tried to get the UN Security Council
to go along with him, but most of the rest of the world decided
diplomacy was in fact working and there was no need to spill blood.
The President wrote out the letters to the House and Senate stating
that diplomacy had failed and two days later gave the word for our
troops to invade Iraq from their posts in Kuwait.
Where was Senator Kerry in all this? Here is an account in the July
26 issue of The New Yorker, a commendable Kerry profile by
Phil Gourevitch:
At campaign rallies, Kerry often says of Bush, “If you think I
would have taken us to war the way he did, you shouldn’t vote
for me.” This line is carefully formulated, he told me, “Because
I might well have been in Iraq if Saddam had stiffed the U.N.,
continued to not allow inspections, hidden things. But I would
have brought other countries to the point of impatience with him.
Then they would have been there with us. And the President could
have done that. I know because I spent the time to go up and meet
with Security Council representatives. I talked to them at great
length prior to the vote.”
Kerry was the only senator to go to New York for such a meeting.
“I came away convinced they were serious, that the resolutions
did mean something, that they saw it as a moment for the U.N.
to stand up for itself,” he said. “But they had political issues
in their own countries, their own populations weren’t ready, they
needed to go through a certain walk up to it. That was legitimate,
and the President never gave them a chance to that – forced it
down their throats, built up so fast – and they became aware that
he just intended to go do this. He sent them a message of disrespect
without the process. Then they got their backs up, and that led
to a series of stubborn encounters that resulted in a failed foreign
policy.”
You can see here that it would be impossible for Kerry to now say,
knowing what he now knows, that he could justify the President’s
decision to invade when he did. Still, from the Bush formulation
to Kerry’s response in defending his vote on what he knew AT THE
TIME, that the idea lingers in the major media. Here was Tim Russert
yesterday on “Meet the Press” quizzing Senator Hillary Clinton on
the subject:
MR.
RUSSERT: But John Kerry said he would vote again today for authorization,
even knowing what he knows now. You don't agree with that.
SEN. CLINTON: Well, but I think the point John was making was
the same one I was making, that we don't have a choice to have
hindsight. You know, I have said many times, I think on this program,
that I don't regret giving the president authority based on what
we knew at the time, but I regret deeply the way he's used it.
I’ve already written to Tim Russert suggesting he check into this,
as it is key to understanding Kerry and his differences with the
President. If you wish to run this down further, Joe Rothstein of
www.USpoliticstoday.com
advised me that William Saletan, the chief political correspondent
at Slate, went to the
trouble on August 12 running down the facts of the matter.
It would be helpful if Senator Kerry himself cleared this up, perhaps
on his next visit to “Meet the Press.” As it was plain from her
response to Russert, Hillary Clinton may herself be confused on
what Kerry said on August 9.
PS: If you are interested in my views on the economic origins of
the Vietnam War, they are posted as this
week's lesson at my Supply-Side University.
September
1, 2004
Jude
Wanniski [send him mail]
runs the financial/political advisory service Wanniski.com.
(If you subscribe,
and check LewRockwell.com in the referring website pull-down,
LRC gets 10%).
Copyright
© 2004 Jude Wanniski
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