Register for E-mail alerts. Comment on articles. Sign up today, it's easy.
Close
The Washington Times Online Edition

Obama vows to rebuild military

Sen. Barack Obama told a veterans group yesterday that he would rebuild the military as president and gave a harsh rebuke to the Iraqi government.

The Illinois Democrat, speaking to the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) convention in Kansas City, Mo., said the nation hasn’t given troops enough support abroad or once they return home.

“We enter into a sacred trust with our veterans from the moment they put on that uniform,” Mr. Obama said, pledging that he would honor that trust.

Former Sen. Fred Thompson, a Tennessee Republican who is considering a presidential bid, told the VFW yesterday that the military is “stretched too thin,” but he rejected calls for withdrawal from Iraq.

“Some people … think if we can pull out of Iraq, our problems will be over,” he said. “Success won’t solve all our problems but failure will make our problems much, much greater.”

Mr. Obama’s speech made little distinction from remarks a day earlier by his primary rival, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York.

“There are no good options,” Mr. Obama said, “no military solution in Iraq.”

“No military surge can succeed without political reconciliation and a surge of diplomacy in Iraq and the region,” he said. “Iraq’s leaders are not reconciling. They are not achieving political benchmarks. The only thing they seem to have agreed on is to take a vacation.”

Mrs. Clinton said Monday that the United States has “some very hard decisions to make” in Iraq.

“I’m not sure there are any good options,” she said. “I think the best way of honoring [the troops’] service is by beginning to bring them home and making sure that when they come home that we have everything ready for them.”

Mrs. Clinton told the VFW that the surge of troops into Iraq this spring is working but that the United States is “years too late” in changing strategies.

“I do not think the Iraqis are ready to do what they have to do for themselves yet,” she said. “I think it is unacceptable for our troops to be caught in the crossfire of a sectarian civil war while the Iraqi government is on vacation.”

Former Sen. John Edwards, North Carolina Democrat, said Mrs. Clinton is trying to “have it both ways.”

“You cannot be for the president’s strategy in Iraq but against the war,” he said. “Suggesting that the surge is working completely misrepresents the facts about Iraq. By cherry-picking one instance to validate a failed Bush strategy, it risks undermining the effort in the Congress to end this war.”

Republican candidate Sen. John McCain of Arizona, a decorated Vietnam veteran, told the VFW on Monday that “our defeat in Iraq would be catastrophic” for both Iraq and the U.S.

Story Continues →

View Entire Story
Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
You Might Also Like
  • More images, videos reveal GSA fun at 2010 Vegas conference

  • D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Gray. (Barbara L. Salisbury/The Washington Times)

    Campaign aide for Gray cuts plea deal

  • **FILE** President Obama, accompanied by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, announces the revamp of his contraception policy requiring religious institutions to fully pay for birth control on Feb. 10, 2012, at the White House. (Associated Press)

    Catholic leaders take aim at Obama contraception plan

  • Happening Now

        Independent voices from the TWT Communities

        World View

        Columns from Voices around the World talking about the events, people, politics and social issues that concern us wherever, and whoever, we are.

        The Conscience of a Realist

        Politics, culture, economics, history, and essentially everything in between from a decidedly real world perspective.