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DENVER - Even as rockets exploded in the so-called "Green Zone" today
in Baghdad, a day before General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker
testify before Congress on the Iraq war, John McCain chose to launch another
round of irresponsible political attacks rather than offer a real plan for the
future in Iraq. The attack came even though a majority of Americans want our
troops to begin withdrawing from Iraq and 89 percent of Americans think the
cost of the war has contributed to the economic problems in our country. [ New
YorkTimes, 4/4/08]
"Adopting George W. Bush's penchant for cherry-picking the facts and misleading
the American people is the wrong approach for John McCain, and the wrong approach
for America," said Colorado Democratic Party Chair Pat Waak. "With
54 troops from Colorado already having lost their lives in Iraq and nearly 500
injured, Coloradans want to hear a plan for Iraq going forward, not political
attacks designed to distract from McCain's lack of answers on the war. John
McCain ought to exercise real responsibility and provide Coloradans and every
American with a real plan for Iraq."
In his Kansas City remarks today, McCain never explained if he agrees with
General Petraeus' concerns that Iraq's leaders are failing to make the political
progress the surge was supposed to make possible, and never explained what he
would do to encourage that critical political progress. And while his campaign
continues to backtrack from McCain's willingness to keep our troops in Iraq
for 100 years, McCain himself refused to say whether he plans to build permanent
bases in Iraq. And, despite the tremendous economic cost of the war, McCain
never said how he plans to pay for his stay the course strategy in Iraq while
making President Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy permanent - a prescription
for trillions of dollars in new debt.
"The American people know that 100 years is not a plan," added Waak,
"and that a Commander-in-Chief has to explain not just what he'll do in
Iraq, but also to bring balance to our Army and National Guard. If Colorado’s
voters can't count on a plan from McCain while he's running for President, what
should they expect if he were to become President?"
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