For all the firepower the Democratic candidates directed at
President Bush for the war in Iraq during the primary campaign, you
would think that the Kerry-Edwards presidential campaign would be
just brimming with foreign policy prescriptions. You would
especially think so at a time when the United States is engaged
militarily in two theaters, Afghanistan and Iraq. And of course in
a war against terror that reaches into the American homeland.
But if you expected a lot of specifics from "the two Johns," you
would be wrong. The foreign policy recommendations that have come
out of the campaigns of the two senators have been skimpy and
sometimes in contrast to the candidates' well-documented voting
records in the Senate.
Now, this shortcoming may not be so strange in the case of Mr.
Edwards, who after all is a one-term senator, and who previously
made his living as a malpractice lawyer. It should be considered
significant, though. The criticism implied in President Bush's
comment that "Dick Cheney can be president" is certainly not beyond
the bounds of debate as regards Mr. Edward's experience and
qualifications. In fact, Mr. Kerry thought so himself, stating
during the Democratic primaries that the presidency is not a place
for "on the job training."
In the case of candidate John Kerry, we should be able to form a
picture. Mr. Kerry likes to cite his Vietnam military service
(controversial though his later activism is with many voters). He
was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1984, and he sits on the
Committee on Foreign Relations. In Mr. Kerry's case the difficulty
is abounding inconsistency.
Take Iraq. In 1991, Mr. Kerry was among 45 senators to vote against
the use of force against Iraq. In 2002, Mr. Kerry voted with 76
other senators, including Mr. Edwards, in favor of the resolution
authorizing the Bush administration to use force against Iraq to
ensure Iraqi compliance with U.N. resolution. "This resolution will
send a clear message to Iraq and the world: America is united in
its determination to eliminate forever the threat of Iraq's weapons
of mass destruction," as he said at the time.
Both Mr. Kerry and Mr. Edwards have eloquently stated their support
for building a democratic Iraq. As Mr. Edwards said in a speech at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies in October 2002,
"It is in America's national interest to help build an Iraq at
peace with itself and its neighbors, because a democratic, tolerant
and accountable Iraq will be a peaceful regional partner. And such
an Iraq could serve as a model for the entire Arab world."
Yet both men voted against the $86.5 billion supplemental
appropriations bill for 2004 to fund our forces and to build
infrastructure and democratic institutions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Today, their prescription is call for more U.N. and NATO
involvement in Iraq, though the U.N. is reluctant and no European
ally has stated an eagerness to step forward.
Mr. Kerry would like to be seen as strong on defense. In a 2003
article in Foreign Policy magazine, he wrote, "It is up to
Democrats to understand and prepare for Fourth Generation warfare
(fighting unconventional forces in unconventional ways) so our
nation can be better prepared to wage and win the new war."
Yet, Mr. Kerry's voting record on defense is persistently for
spending cuts and weapons systems reductions. In 1996, for instance
he voted for the Harkin amendment to freeze defense spending for
the next seven years and transfer $34.8 billion in savings to
education and job training. Among the weapons systems he has voted
for eliminating are the B-2 stealth bomber, the F-16 fighter, the
Patriot Missile, the Tomahawk Cruise Missile, the Apache Helicopter
and Aegis Cruiser. And let's not forget that Mr. Kerry has voted
against funding for Missile Defense at least 53 times between 1985
and 2000.
Where Mr. Kerry is fairly consistent is his affinity for
multilateral institutions and arms control regimes, which provide
his answer to today's problems of terrorism and proliferation.
Let's allow Mr. Kerry to explain his vision to fight terrorism,
also from Foreign Policy magazine:
"Draining the swamps of terrorists will require much greater
involvement in the world. It must include significant investments
in the education and human infrastructure of troubled countries.
The globalization of the last decade proved that simple measures
like buying books and teaching family planning can do much to
expose, rebut and isolate, and defeat the apostles of hate." Would
it were so.
Helle Dale is director of Foreign Policy and Defense Studies at the Heritage Foundation. E-mail: [email protected]. Her column ordinarily appears on Wednesdays.
First appeared in The Washington Times