Thursday, July 29, 2004

BOSTON (AP) — Republicans think they’ve found the ideal person to explain in detail the Democratic presidential candidate’s evolving position on the war in Iraq — John Kerry himself.

Using video clips of Mr. Kerry discussing Iraq on various talk shows, the Republican National Committee has put together an 11-minute video that traces how Mr. Kerry struggled with the issue of Iraq through 2003 and early 2004 as he competed for — and finally won — the Democratic presidential nomination.

Republicans unveiled the video yesterday and sent it by e-mail to about 8 million supporters. Republican officials also are pondering how to make the video, produced by Laura Crawford of the Texas firm Crawford Creative, available to the general public.



In the video clips, Mr. Kerry gradually shifts from harsh anti-Saddam Hussein rhetoric in 2001 and 2002 to more cautious comments about Iraq in late 2003 and then to anti-war comments by early 2004.

“We’ve all reached a judgment the United States has to protect its interests,” the Massachusetts senator says on one talk show in early 2002. Saddam “may even slide these weapons off to terrorist groups. It’s the miscalculation that poses the greatest threat,” he says on a September 2002 talk show.

The video notes that Mr. Kerry voted in October 2002 to authorize President Bush to use force.

Through 2003 and early 2004, Mr. Kerry became more cautious and talked against the war as problems grew in Iraq and his primary campaign against anti-war candidate Howard Dean became more intense. The video notes that the senator voted against $87 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan in October 2003.

And it plays, then replays, Mr. Kerry’s comment on the campaign trail about voting for the $87 billion, before he voted against it. He has since explained he voted against the $87 billion because he supported a separate measure that would have rolled back tax cuts for the wealthy to help pay for the expense.

Advertisement
Advertisement

While that explanation may make perfect sense to colleagues in Congress, it may not to voters with little time or patience for the legislative process.

“There’s no question that comments here or there, taken out of context and thrown together, are intended by Republicans to try to simplify or dumb down a crucial issue of war and peace into a simple yes-no question,” said James Rubin, a senior foreign-policy adviser to the Kerry campaign.

Said Chad Clanton, a Kerry spokesman: “This video is nothing but a stale old attack from the Bush-Cheney campaign, who can’t for the life of them find anything positive to say.”

While the video clips are often brief and lack context, they do appear to show Mr. Kerry evolving from a harsh critic of Saddam to an anti-war candidate by early 2004 at the height of the campaign for the nomination.

Mr. Rubin said Mr. Kerry always believed the way the United States went to war was the critical question — giving inspections in Iraq a chance and building alliances first.

Advertisement
Advertisement

“John Kerry showed he understood the complexities about going to war the right way,” he said.

Copyright © 2026 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.