View Single Post
Old 03-17-2004, 02:59 PM   #9
Mavdog
Diamond Member
 
Mavdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Texas
Posts: 6,014
Mavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud ofMavdog has much to be proud of
Default RE: Dean: Bush is to blame for the 200 deaths

Kerry repudiates Dean, although it's a good guess if he can keep Dean from further self-inflicted stupidity
-------------------------------------------
Kerry Doesn't Share Dean's View on Spain
1 hour, 29 minutes ago Add Politics - AP to My Yahoo!

By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Presidential candidate John Kerry (news - web sites) said Wednesday he does not share fellow Democrat Howard Dean (news - web sites)'s position that President Bush (news - web sites)'s decision to send troops to Iraq (news - web sites) appears to have been a factor in the Spanish train bombing.

The chairman of Bush's re-election campaign called on Kerry to repudiate the comment that Dean made during a conference call arranged by the Kerry campaign.

"The president was the one who dragged our troops to Iraq, which apparently has been a factor in the death of 200 Spaniards over the weekend," Dean said as he defended Kerry from a Bush television ad that accused Kerry of turning his back on U.S. soldiers fighting in Iraq.

Asked about the comment on his campaign plane Wednesday, Kerry said, "It's not our position."

Bush campaign chairman Marc Racicot said Dean blamed the deaths on Bush and the war on terror when they were caused by a global terror network.

"If Senator Kerry understands the nature of this threat and the need to take on terror, then he should immediately repudiate these troubling comments, and stop all efforts on behalf of his surrogates to blame America for these attacks," said Racicot, former governor of Montana.

A growing international investigation is focusing on Islamic militants possibly linked to al-Qaida as the culprits in the Madrid train bombings last Thursday. A man who identified himself as an al-Qaida spokesman said on a videotape found in a trash bin that the bombings were in retaliation for Spain's backing of the U.S.-led war in Iraq.

Dean, who ran unsuccessfully against Kerry in the Democratic primary and is now supporting his campaign, said he was simply repeating the connection made on the tape. In a statement issued Tuesday night, Dean clarified his comment by insisting there is no justification for terrorism and calling last week's bombing "a despicable act."

Ed Gillespie, chairman of the Republican National Committee (news - web sites), said Dean was "replacing facts with rumors and fiction."

"We cannot allow presidential candidates or their surrogates to become mouthpieces for terrorists," Gillespie said in a statement.
Mavdog is offline   Reply With Quote