John Edwards 2008: What’s not to like

September 18, 2007

Edward’s incuriosity surpassed that of Bush

I reviewed Robert Draper’s new book, “Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush,” for The New York Sun. I was amazed that much of Draper’s original and exclusive reporting was relegated to an epilogue.

While I didn’t write about it, I thought it was interesting to learn what the Bush Team circa 2004 thought of John Edwards, who is once again running for the White House. “As a senator, Edwards wasn’t one for detailed briefings, or details of any kind. Colleagues who had seen great promise in him, like John McCain and Joe Biden gradually grew disillusioned. They observed that Edward’s incuriosity surpassed that of Bush — who at least read history books and never argued, as John Edwards had in the summer of 2002, that the best reason for invading Iraq was Saddam’s nuclear program … a program that, as it turned out, never existed,” Draper writes. Not exactly a glowing endorsement from a reporter whom Republicans are labelling a Democratic sympathizer.

Seth Gittell 9/18/07
http://gitell.wordpress.com/

June 19, 2007

Edwards the only member of Intelligence Committee who did not read NIE

Few senators read Iraq NIE report

Only a handful of senators outside the Intelligence Committee say they read the full 92-page National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq’s ability to attack the U.S. before voting to go to war, according to a survey conducted by The Hill.

The low interest in the classified estimate, or NIE, could offer valuable cover to the five senators seeking the presidency who acknowledged during recent debates that they did not read the complete document before the pivotal Iraq vote.

snip

Of the 22 senators who reported reading the full NIE, eight are Republicans and 14 are Democrats. All but one Democrat on the 17-person Intelligence Committee in 2002 recalled reading the NIE: Former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) told a campaign-trail audience earlier this month that he had, but later recanted. Edwards voted to authorize war.

The Hill
http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/few-senators-read-iraq-nie-report-2007-06-19.html

June 16, 2007

Edwards believed Bush should have been given authority for invasion decision

Edwards is a Democrat who voted for a 2002 resolution giving President Bush authority to invade Iraq. He has since apologized for the vote. He said Friday he had believed that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and that President Bush should have been given the authority to make the invasion decision. “On both scores, it turned out I was wrong,” he said.

Edwards acknowledged to reporters that he did not read a classified report on Iraq available to members of Congress before the 2002 vote. He said he read an administration summary of the report, called the National Intelligence Estimate. He said he also talked to high-level officials of the Clinton administration.

snip

War critics contend the administration’s summary of the report glossed over skepticism contained in the complete document.

Edwards said Friday that he did not need to read the report because he was receiving information directly from intelligence officers as a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee. “I had the information I needed,” he said. “I just voted wrong.”

DesMoines Register
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070616/NEWS09/706160319/-1/RSS22

June 5, 2007

Bush’s war — the CliffsNotes

The thing about a war is that once it has started, you can’t take it back.

Yes, Bush did push for the Iraq war. Yes, Bush asserted that Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. Bush also had help — a 296-133 House vote and 77-23 Senate vote in favor of a resolution authorizing the use of military force in Iraq, with Clinton, former Sen. John Edwards, and Sens. Joe Biden and Christopher Dodd voting in the “yes” column.

This is Bush’s war, the Democrats claim, because that dunderhead president misled them — which is interesting, because presidential frontrunners Clinton and Edwards told debate host Wolf Blitzer that it did not matter that neither of them had read the 90-page National Intelligence Estimate before they voted for the war resolution. They had been briefed. Edwards read the five-page summary.

So now it’s: Bush lied, we read the CliffsNotes.

snip

As for Edwards, his idea of leadership is to claim in February, “I think I was the first, at least close to being the first, to say very publicly that I was wrong.” To me, that makes Edwards the first, or nearly the first candidate, to let down troops who can’t go home, and fallen troops who cannot be brought back to life, just because Edwards admits he was wrong.

And as Sen. Barack Obama pointed out, “John, the fact is, is that I opposed this war from the start. So you are about four-and-a-half years late on leadership on this issue.”

Edwards and Clinton say they take responsibility for their wrong votes — although Clinton won’t quite say hers was wrong. If they truly want to take responsibility, they should not be running.

San Francisco Chronicle
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/06/05/EDGGTP3FH51.DTL

June 4, 2007

John Edwards flubs the second Democratic Debate

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Iraq War, Iraq War Intelligence — none @ 7:56 pm
The second Democratic presidential debate, held last night in Manchester, New Hampshire, was remarkably free of the usual cant. One could actually learn something about immigration and health care policy or U.S. options in Darfur from listening to the exchanges. Two of the leading candidates, Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, were at their best, as were Senators Chris Dodd and Joe Biden. The one candidate who did himself no good whatsoever, however, was former Senator John Edwards. Edwards’s campaign increasingly looks as though it lacks any justification except for his own ambition.

Snip: The one dud was Edwards. As became obvious during the 2004 campaign, Edwards’s forte is domestic policy. He is at home talking about the “two Americas” and calling for an investigation into oil-company price gouging. But he is uncomfortable talking about foreign policy or playing the role of attack dog. When he attempts to do so, he ends up creating sympathy for his opponent, as he did in his 2004 debate with Vice President Dick Cheney, when he made inappropriate references to Mary Cheney’s lesbianism. Last night’s debate similarly showcased Edwards at his worst: attempting to draw sharp and spurious distinctions between himself and his opponents on foreign policy.

Edwards has cast himself, along with Dennis Kucinich, as the anti-war candidate. Last night, he called on Democrats in the Senate to keep sending President Bush bills on Iraq that he would have to veto–what Frank Rich has called a “legislative Groundhog Day.” He also criticized Obama and Clinton for being insufficiently adamant in opposing funding. “Well, I think there’s a difference between leading and following,” he declared in characterizing their votes against war spending.

But Edwards is a poor fit for an anti-war candidate. Biden dealt unceremoniously with his calls to end funding with some simple math: “We have 50 votes in the United States Senate,” Biden said. “We have less of a majority in the House than at any time other than the last eight years. Ladies and gentlemen, you’re going to end this war when you elect a Democratic president. You need 67 votes to end this war.” And, as Obama noted, Edwards voted for the original war resolution. “The fact is, is that I opposed this war from the start,” Obama said. “So you’re about four and a half years late on leadership on this issue.”

Edwards, of course, has said his vote on the war was “wrong,” but he wasn’t simply wrong about the war. He behaved irresponsibly. Edwards’s failure to read the National Intelligence Estimate prior to the vote was more egregious than Clinton’s. Edwards was a member of the Intelligence Committee and was AWOL when the committee’s leading Democrats were voicing skepticism about the war’s justification. In June 2003, when it had become clear that Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction, I asked Edwards’s staff whether he would be interested in discussing what Spencer Ackerman and I were discovering about the administration’s attempt to deceive the public and Congress. I was told that Edwards didn’t want to touch the issue, and he didn’t. Instead, as the insurgency in Iraq began to rage and Americans began to suspect they had been bamboozled about the war, he continued to talk about the “two Americas.”

In the debate, Edwards did show that he learned something from having blundered this spring on Iran when he took one position on bombing Iran when he speaking in Israel and another after he returned home. His response last night that the United States should use “serious economic sanctions” if incentives to forgo nuclear-bomb production failed was well considered. But his other answers revealed a person ill-suited to deal with foreign policy. He thought the United States should leave open the possibility of boycotting the 2008 Olympics in Beijing if China refused to join sanctions against the Sudan over Darfur. That could put U.S.-China relations into a tailspin. When asked what he would do in his first hundred days, he said he would “travel the world, reestablish America’s moral authority in the world, which I think is absolutely crucial.” One can just imagine a new president spending his first three months in office, when his power is greatest, going from capital to capital like Phileas Fogg in Jules Verne’s Around the World in Eighty Days.

It’s a pity, because, purely on paper, Edwards may be most viable Democratic presidential candidate in November 2008. He is a white Southern Protestant who can talk to rural and small-town voters in Kentucky or Southern Ohio without making them wince. Clinton will have to overcome the prejudices associated with her sex and her reputation as a Northeastern liberal. And Obama, if he is nominated, will have to contend with his race and lack of political experience. But if Edwards’s performance in this debate is any indication, Democrats are going to have to make do with Clinton or Obama. Still, judging from their performance last night, that might not be such a bad thing after all.

The New Republic

http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=w070604&s=judis060407

It’s The N.I.E…Yea, You Know Me…

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Intelligence Committee, Iraq War Intelligence — none @ 5:04 pm

From NBC’s Chuck Todd

Hillary Clinton can be stubborn, can’t she. She won’t apologize for her vote on the war (like some Democrats want her to) and she won’t acknowledge whether it was a mistake NOT reading the N.I.E.

And now John Edwards also doesn’t believe it was a mistake that he didn’t read the N.I.E. In talking with one very knowledgable source of the Intelligence Committee inner-workings during that time period, this person expressed surprise that Edwards didn’t read the N.I.E. He had more access to it because he was on the Intelligence Committee.

MSNBC

http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2007/06/03/212129.aspx

June 3, 2007

NIE Back Again

Clinton asked about not reading NIE. She said she feels she had the information she needed and was briefed. Edwards tries to draw line in the sand, says the difference is he says he was “wrong.”

Obama was right, Edwards said; he didn’t vote for it.

MSNBC

http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2007/06/03/212128.aspx

June 2, 2007

Edwards says he had all the intelligence he needed for Iraq vote

LAS VEGAS (AP) - Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards said he doesn’t regret not reading an key intelligence report before voting to authorize the war in Iraq.

“I think I had the information that was available at the time,” the former North Carolina senator told The Associated Press at a campaign stop in Las Vegas. “I wish I’d voted against the war.”

Edwards’ campaign said Friday that he misspoke when he initially said he had read the National Intelligence Estimate before the vote. He told the AP Saturday he was well briefed by senior administration officials and read the summary of the NIE.

“I got my intelligence information from many sources,” he said. “The intelligence we got was wrong.”

The 2002 report concluded Iraq was reconstituting its nuclear program, but it has since been found to contain many errors. One of Edwards’ rival, New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, also has said she did not read the report before voting to authorize the war.

http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/nevada/2007/jun/02/060210596.html

Edwards Again Says He Read Classified National Intelligence Estimate Report

Okay, we’re not wholly sure what to make of this. While we completely admire John Edwards’ repudiation of his vote to authorize the Iraq War, we’re uncertain about the Edwards campaign’s handling of an issue related to it.

Specifically: We’ve just discovered another example of John Edwards saying — in apparent contradiction of his spokesman — that he read the classified pre-war version of the National Intelligence Estimate containing serious caveats about Iraq’s weapons programs and the need for war.

snip

In addressing why Edwards had told the Google town hall that he’d read the document, his spokesman said that he’d misunderstood the question and that he’d always said he’d only read the declassified version, not the classified one.

But here’s a transcript of Edwards on Meet the Press on February 4, 2007, where he again seems to be saying the opposite:

MR. RUSSERT: General Scowcroft, former President Bush’s national security advisor. And the National Intelligence Estimate that was given to you and now made public had some real caveats, and this is one of them. “ The activities we have detected do not … add up to a compelling case that Iraq is currently pursuing what INR [the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research] would consider to be an integrated and comprehensive approach to acquire nuclear weapons.” Do you remember seeing that?

SEN. EDWARDS: Mm-hmm, I did see it. I mean, I, I think it was — there were serious questions about whether — again, we’re looking back. Now we know none of this was true. But, at the time, there were serious questions about any effort to obtain nuclear weapons, which is what that statement just was. All of us believed there was no question that he had chemical and biological weapons, and there was at least some scattered evidence that he was making an effort to get nuclear weapons.

The caveat Russert cited is in the originally classified version, i.e., the version Edwards’ spokesperson said he hadn’t read. But here he seems to be saying he had read it — or at the very least had been briefed on the key caveats therein. The Edwards campaign declined to comment when we contacted them about this.

TPM Cafe Election Central
http://electioncentral.tpmcafe.com/blog/electioncentral/2007/jun/01/edwards_again_says_he_read_classified_national_intelligence_estimate_report

June 1, 2007

The Intelligence Test

The Intelligence Test: John Edwards has implied throughout his campaign that one thing that makes him a better candidate than Hillary Clinton is his admission that his vote to authorize the Iraq war in 2002 was a mistake — Clinton has said she would not vote for the war knowing what she knows now, but hasn’t apologized for her prior decision.Edwards’ tactic has helped him garner support from the party’s most stridently anti-war elements and the blogging community. But just when he seemed to have one more opening, it’s been taken away. Clinton has taken flak over the past week after it was revealed she had not read the entire National Intelligence Estimate that provided much of the basis for the war. She says she was fully briefed about the contents, but critics wonder how the senator could have voted on such a momentous issue without going through the report itself with a fine-tooth comb.

Perfect opportunity for Edwards to jump in, right? Well, no, because it turns out that despite having indicated he did read the full report, his campaign now says he did not. Not reading the NIE, in and of itself, isn’t the problem for Edwards; after all, he apologized for his vote. But he’s certainly not in a position to add this particular criticism to his stump speeches. — David Miller

CBS News Pure Horserace
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/06/01/politics/purehorserace/main2876158.shtml

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