Of the remaining candidates, the Iraq war remains an important, yet not central,
part of their candidacy.
In his speech after the New Hampshire primary, Barack
Obama had only this mention of the war, yet his reference excited his supporters.
... and when I am President, we will end this war in Iraq and bring the
troops home ...
His troop home now message would remove up to 6000 troops per
month, saying all combat troops would be out by the end of his first year in
office. Under his strategic reduction, about 50,000 non-combat troops would
still be in the country at the beginning of 2010, assisting in volatile regions
with the intention of continuing reductions. Obama does not talk about removing
the hundreds of thousands of American contractors in Iraq.
He would deploy
at least 7,000 of those troops to Afghanistan and leave some in neighboring
countries in case of an Al Qaeda insurgence.
Obama gave a speech as Illinois
State Senator in 2002, just three weeks after the Senate gave President Bush
war authorization. He called the war dumb, an predicted a long occupation
that would drain US resources and lives.
Meanwhile, Democrat John Edwards,
who voted for authorization for the war as US Senator in 2002, has since apologized
for what he calls a mistake. He released a more aggressive withdrawal timetable
in recent weeks.
... I will withdraw the troops with in 10 months. I will promise to do that
because we have to win this war in Iraq ...
In his new plan, he calls
an immediate withdrawal. He is the most specific on the number of troops that
he says will stay in Iraq. 4 – 5000 troops will remain to protect the Embassy
and possibly for humanitarian workers.
He too says troops will stay in the neighboring
counties and some will be transferred to Afghanistan.
Hillary Clinton also
supported the war and was the last of the democratic candidates to announce
her opposition. She provides the fewest details on her Iraq plan. She says
troops will start coming home with in 60 days. But she doesn't talk about
an end game. She says she will listen to her military commanders to help guide
the withdrawal. She implied a cautious Iraq agenda at this speech in New Hampshire.
... to deliver on the promise that we'll have the will and the wisdom to
end the war in Iraq the right way ...
All the candidates talk about a diplomatic strategy.
Edwards and Obama implicitly state they will work with Iran and Syria to help
stabilize the country. Clinton's plan implies that she'll do so.
Meanwhile
on the Republican side, Senator John McCain said he'd keep troops in Iraq for
100 years if he has to.
FSRN asked McCain if that position could hurt him in
the general election if he were to be the nominee.
His response;
... I'd rather loose a political battle than give up my principles ...
Meanwhile,
anti-war groups will continue to put pressure on candidates to make Iraq a
central part of their campaign.
To look a bit deeper into the Democratic candidate's Iraq war policy. Life-long
anti-war activist and author of "Ending the War in Iraq", Tom Hayden, talks
about what the Democratic presidential candidates' don't talk about in their
Iraq policies. Hayden begins by analyzing the political forces he feels are
influencing the candidates. This interview was done by KPFK producer Suzi Weissman.