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Kerry Mocks Bush's war leadership, says few follow
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-10-21 00:51

Democratic challenger John Kerry, portrayed by Republicans as unfit to be commander in chief, scoffed at President Bush's own wartime leadership on Wednesday and urged his rival: "Look behind you, there's hardly anyone there."

With the White House up for grabs in less than two weeks, the Massachusetts senator decided his best defense to charges from Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney that he could not keep America safe was a strong offense.

"The president's failures in Iraq have made us weaker, not stronger, in the war on terrorism," Kerry told supporters in Waterloo, Iowa. "That is the hard truth. The president refuses to acknowledge it."

He charged that Bush had "taken his eye" off the real threat to the United States -- groups like al Qaeda blamed for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States -- and created a distraction by invading Iraq.

The White House treated U.S. allies with "contempt and disdain" in the run up to the invasion of Iraq and in the war's aftermath, giving them an excuse to stay on the sidelines instead of helping with security and reconstruction.

"The president didn't even try. I will lead and I believe others will follow," Kerry declared.

Both candidates have pledged to stay the course in Iraq, bring in more U.S. allies and train Iraqi troops to take over their own security, but Kerry has said he will be more successful at it.

Yet countries like France and Germany, which opposed the Iraq war, have shown no signs of changing tack even if the Democrat is elected on Nov. 2.

Kerry reserved his most scathing critique for Bush's leadership skills, his constant "denial" about the current chaos in Iraq and his campaign "distortions."

"He wants to make it solely a contest on national security," Kerry said. "You know, the president says he's a leader. Well, Mr. President, look behind you. There's hardly anyone there. It's not leadership if we haven't built the strongest alliance possible and if America is almost alone."

SOFTENS EARLIER LINE

Kerry himself softened an earlier draft of the speech that said, "No one is there. It's not leadership if no one follows" because an aide said he did not want to offend those allies who joined the U.S.-led invasion and were helping now in Iraq.

A raft of troubles in post-war Iraq, including attacks on U.S. troops, kidnappings and beheadings that play across Americans' television screens every day, have given Kerry an opening and new ammunition.

A strong performance in the first presidential debate helped him cut into the Republican edge on national security although, in a race that is a dead heat overall, polls show voters still trust Bush more on fighting terrorism.

But Kerry said a vote for Bush was a vote for four more years "of the same" and offered his latest campaign slogan -- "a fresh start."

The United States was fighting two distinct wars, he said, the war in Iraq where Bush's "miscalculations" had created "a terrorist haven that wasn't there before," and the war on terror.

"President Bush likes to confuse the two," Kerry said. "He claims that Iraq is the centerpiece in the war on terror. In fact, Iraq was a profound diversion from that war and the battle against out greatest enemy -- (al Qaeda leader) Osama bin Laden."

 

Bush campaign spokesman Steve Schmidt said Kerry was stuck in a "pre-9/11" mind-set.

"He outlined a retaliatory struggle against the terrorists that mimics the 1990s doctrine of response after attack," Schmidt said. "The lesson of 9/11, and the lesson that John Kerry did not learn, is that we must look to address threats before we are attacked, not because they attack us."



 
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