Article Search

 Democrats bash Bush over Iraq 'lies'
    June 23 2003 at 05:39AM Get IOL on your
mobile at m.iol.co.za

Chicago - Several aspiring Democratic presidential candidates criticised the Bush administration's failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq during a political forum in Chicago on Sunday.

"We knew there weren't any weapons of mass destruction," said Dennis Kucinich, a congressman from Ohio, describing the war as a "fraud."

"Lying to the American people is a weapon of mass destruction, Mr Bush."

Former Vermont governor, Howard Dean, an opponent of the war, noted that American forces had been in control of Iraq for over 50 days and hadn't turned up any evidence of nuclear, biological or chemical weapons.

'Lying to the American people is a weapon of mass destruction'
"We're finding out that the administration wasn't truthful with us," he told a largely black and Latino audience during a political forum that brought together seven of the nine Democratic presidential hopefuls.

The only woman in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination for the 2004 race called the Bush administration's pre-emptive strike on Iraq "a war of choice and not necessity," that "put young American men and women in harm's way for no good reason."
Continues Below ↓





The Bush administration, Carol Moseley Braun continued, had manipulated public concern about terrorism in the wake of the September 11 attacks to advance "an extreme political agenda," which had eroded civil liberties.

The Reverend Al Sharpton also weighed in on the subject of Iraq during a forum hosted by the Reverend Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/Push Coalition.

"Mr Bush led us in (to the war) saying there were weapons of mass destruction that we cannot find," Sharpton said, suggesting that former president Bill Clinton "would have been impeached," for allegedly misleading the US public the way that president Bush had done.

The war 'put young American men and women in harm's way for no good reason'
The fiery New York-based civil rights activist also questioned how American taxpayers could afford billions of dollars for the reconstruction of Iraq "when we don't have money for the 50 states we already occupy."

The heavy-hitters among Democratic White House hopefuls, steered clear of the politically tricky question of Iraq, which has come to be seen as a litmus test of patriotism.

Missouri congressman Dick Gephardt, Massachusetts senator John Kerry, and the senator for Connecticut, Joseph Lieberman, instead chose to assail the president on his record on the economy, education, health care, tax cuts and affirmative action.

Senator Joe Lieberman came closest in challenging the president on what many pundits see as his strongest suits: national defence and internal security.

The 2000 Democratic vice presidential nominee - he shared the ticket with Al Gore - Lieberman berated the administration for being slow to act after the September 11 attacks and then for letting United States intelligence agencies off the hook for information gaffes. - Sapa-AFP




Email StoryPrint Story
BOOKMARK THIS STORY
Social bookmarking allows users to save and categorise a personal collection of bookmarks and share them with others. This is different to using your own browser bookmarks which are available using the menus within your web browser.

Use the links below to share this article on the social bookmarking site of your choice.

Read more about social bookmarking at Wikipedia - Social Bookmarking

muti



     Related Articles
More World stories

Watch IOLs latest videos on YouTube Join IOLs Facebook page Follow IOL on Twitter





     Online Services

Date Your Destiny
 
I'm a 39 year old woman looking to meet men between the ages of 35 and 48.
 

     More Services

     More World Stories