6 Democratic candidates hammer Iraq war in Iowa
INDIANOLA, Iowa (AP) — Six Democratic presidential candidates took aim at President Bush as they made their case Sunday to thousands of activists scattered across an Iowa field.
“Everybody is sick and tired of being sick and tired of George Bush,” said Illinois Sen. Barack Obama. “All you have to do is take a look at the president pretending that going around in circles was making progress. If that doesn’t get you ready to get rid of George Bush, I don’t know what will.”
The six candidates paraded after each other in a carnival-like atmosphere in a field about 20 miles south of Des Moines. An estimated 12,000 activists streamed in for Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin’s annual steak fry, shelling out $30 each in a fundraiser for a veteran Democrat senator who doesn’t face serious opposition in next year’s election.
John Edwards and Hillary Rodham Clinton joined with Harkin to grill some steaks before a giant bank of television cameras. “I’ve done this before,” Edwards said as he flipped a steak.
Clinton, the New York senator, called on Bush to bring the troops home from Iraq, declaring, “The era of cowboy diplomacy is over.”
‘No military solution’
“They deserve to come home because there is no military solution,” said Clinton. “Unfortunately, both the Iraqi government and the Bush administration have failed.”
Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden, who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said: “George Bush made it clear — he will not end the war in Iraq. If there was ever any doubt, now there is none. One of us on this stage will have to stop the war he started.”
Obama said he would not vote for any war-funding measure that doesn’t include a timeline for bringing troops home.
Biden said the war must end if common goals are to be achieved. “We must recognize that until we end the divisive politics this war has spawned, we will be unable to build a consensus here at home to accomplish all the goals we share,” he said.
43
