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Kerry Balks at Sending Troops to Sudan
ABCnews.com ^ | 10/07/2004 | The Associated Press

Posted on 10/07/2004 7:28:39 PM PDT by nonkultur

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So Kerry would allow genocide to happen and blame it on Iraq and Afghanistan.
1 posted on 10/07/2004 7:28:40 PM PDT by nonkultur
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To: nonkultur

Translation: "I won't do a damned thing and it's all Bush's fault."


2 posted on 10/07/2004 7:30:03 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: nonkultur
"Our moral leadership is not what it ought to be."

That's the motto of the Kerry/Edwards ticket.

3 posted on 10/07/2004 7:31:26 PM PDT by Paul Atreides
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To: Cicero

Democrats, the new isolationists of the United States!


4 posted on 10/07/2004 7:31:32 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (A Proud member of Free Republic ~~The New Face of the Fourth Estate since 1996.)
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To: nonkultur

No he'd blame it on Bush.

Did you hear his crack today about how by the time he took the Presidency he didn't know how he'd solve things in Iraq, he might be looking at another Lebanon.

Anyway, he's already making excuses and placing blame for his failure as a President (should he get elected...God forbid.)


5 posted on 10/07/2004 7:31:33 PM PDT by dawn53
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To: nonkultur

Of course not - Sudan didn't pass the GLOBAL TEST yet !!


6 posted on 10/07/2004 7:32:32 PM PDT by traumer
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To: nonkultur

I wish that Kerry would just go away but unfortunately he is Senator here from Massachusetts for at least another 2 years, and likely for far beyond that despite his horrific attendance record.

Hey, his lack of voting is actually preferable to his actual voting in my opinion.

Kerrry is scum.


7 posted on 10/07/2004 7:33:38 PM PDT by Radix (What turns orange in Sept., is carved up in Oct., and is thrown out in Nov.?)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Democrats, the new isolationists of the United States!

Unless there's a chance to bomb outgunned Christians.
(e.g., in the Balkans)
8 posted on 10/07/2004 7:33:39 PM PDT by VOA
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Hey Kerry, we have more than enough troops up to the task... they are stationed in Germany...


9 posted on 10/07/2004 7:33:42 PM PDT by oolatec
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To: nonkultur
"So Kerry would allow genocide to happen and blame it on Iraq and Afghanistan."

Yep... following the Clinton example in Rwanda.

10 posted on 10/07/2004 7:34:36 PM PDT by bcoffey (Bush/Cheney: Real men taking charge, talking straight, telling the truth.)
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To: nonkultur


Seared in Their Memories
Former POWs remember Kerry all too painfully well.

Amid the controversies over John Kerry's and George W. Bush's real and invented military records, the Mainstream Media spotlight has avoided one amazing fact: Former Vietnam POWs remember their captors using Kerry's words as instruments of intimidation and torture.

"The interrogator went through all of these statements from John Kerry," recalls James Warner, a Marine pilot who was shot down and held near Hanoi for five years and five months. "He starts pounding on the table. 'See, here, this naval officer. He admits that you are a criminal and that you deserve punishment.' ...I didn't know what was going to come next. In other words, for the rest of the time we were in that camp, I was very ill at ease."

Warner — who earned a Silver Star and two Purple Hearts — appears in Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal. This 45-minute documentary, produced by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Carlton Sherwood, is available via stolenhonor.com. It presents POWs who argue that John Kerry's fallacious spring 1971 claims that U.S. atrocities occurred "on a day-to-day basis with the full awareness of officers at all levels of command" amplified their agony under America's North Vietnamese enemies. (See, also, Kate O'Beirne, "Honor Reclaimed.")

"That was a very difficult time," says former Air Force pilot Leo Thorsness, a Congressional Medal of Honor winner who spent five years and 19 days in North Vietnamese hands. "The things he [Kerry] said were just devastating, because he was using words like 'war criminal' and that kind of stuff. As a prisoner of war, we were being told we were war criminals, and that we'd be tried for war crimes, and unless we confess, and ask for forgiveness, and badmouth the war, and take their side in the war, we'd never go home."

Adds retired Air Force colonel Ken Cordier: "I was outraged and still am that he [Kerry] willingly said things which were untrue — the very same points that we took torture not to write and say." Cordier was incarcerated for six years and three months.

Stolen Honor describes the conditions in which POWs were detained. They were held in solitary confinement and communicated among each other by tapping coded messages through the dark, dank walls. Some prisoners were hung from the walls with their wrists behind their backs, causing shoulder injuries that persist even today. Others, who broke limbs in combat, were forced to sit or stand in positions that exacerbated their agony. The North Vietnamese constantly tormented them psychologically, to fracture their will and shatter their morale. John Kerry's voice aided those efforts.

Former Navy pilot Paul Galanti remembers his jailers at the so-called Hanoi Hilton playing English-language radio broadcasts of Kerry's April 22, 1971 testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

"They made a big deal about this guy who was a naval officer, talking about all these atrocities and war crimes," Galanti told Human Events. "They'd been for years saying, 'You're not prisoners of war, you're war criminals. You're never going home. We're going to try you after the war, and you'll all be found guilty of war crimes.'"

Not long ago, Galanti linked that voice from yesterday with the man running for president today. While recently watching a documentary on the peace movement, Galanti heard Kerry claim that American GIs in Vietnam "razed villages in fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan." Kerry distinctly pronounced "Genghis" with soft Gs (as in "gelatin") rather than hard ones (as in "grit").

"Right away, I said, 'Hey, wait a minute. That's the guy I heard in Hanoi,'" Galanti concluded.

Former Air Force captain Tom Collins also remembers his North Vietnamese captors forcing him to listen to Kerry's statements as well as Jane Fonda's antiwar remarks.

"I wasn't necessarily disappointed in Jane Fonda," Collins told Human Events. "I figured she's just some airhead Hollywood actress. So what? But then along comes this military officer...I expected more out of a Navy lieutenant. That's why I was so demoralized. It was far worse for him to do it."

Put yourself in these men's shoes: Imagine the prospect of hearing from the Oval Office the same voice your jailers used 33 years ago to break your mind in two.

 
     


 

 
http://www.nationalreview.com/murdock/murdock200410070853.asp
     


11 posted on 10/07/2004 7:35:31 PM PDT by ppaul
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To: nonkultur
"Our moral leadership is not what it ought to be."

There are no words that can describe the contempt I hold for John Kerry. Spitting would come close as nasty as that would be.

12 posted on 10/07/2004 7:36:56 PM PDT by jwalsh07 (Always ask yourself, does this pass the Global Test?)
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To: nonkultur

No he will blame everything on Bush... The people need to see thru this charade... I fear the end of our society if Kerry wins.


13 posted on 10/07/2004 7:37:04 PM PDT by tomnbeverly (Global Tests in the defense of our Country are not supported by the CONSTITUTION.)
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To: nonkultur
"I don't want to be a country that allows a second genocide
in a decade
to take place," Kerry said.


D-mn, Kerry is good.
Seeing how the Rwanda genocide was (mostly, IIRC) a 1994 event...
by the time a President Kerry would get sworn in, that decade will be elapsed.

Kerry is even slicker than Bubba.

If Kerry wins, the ruling Arab Muslims and janjaweed murderers are gonna'
have one heck of a party.
Then get back to the rapin' and pillagin'.
14 posted on 10/07/2004 7:37:54 PM PDT by VOA
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To: nonkultur
Wait an Edwards-blushing minute.


Kerrry would not send troops to the Sudan?

But, but, but he said this during the Debate just last week Thursday!

Where the heck is he going to send the two whole Divisions he's intent on creating?
15 posted on 10/07/2004 7:39:11 PM PDT by Chummy ("I Rather Know when I See BS." RepublicanAttackSquad.biz: "A vote 4 Kerry is a vote 4 Osama")
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To: nonkultur
Okay, to be fair and accurate, here's what Kerry said last Thursday with respect to the genocide in the Sudan:

"Now, with respect to Darfur, yes, it is a genocide. And months ago, many of us were pressing for action.

"I think the reason that we're not saying send American troops in at this point is severalfold.

"Number one, we can do this through the African Union, providing we give them the logistical support. Right now all the president is providing is humanitarian support. We need to do more than that. They've got to have the logistical capacity to go in and stop the killing. And that's going to require more than is on the table today... "...in my plan, I add two active duty divisions to the United States Army, not for Iraq, but for our general demands across the globe...

"But I'll tell you this, as president, if it took American forces to some degree to coalesce the African Union, I'd be prepared to do it because we could never allow another Rwanda.

"It's the moral responsibility for us and the world."

******************

This buffoon is all over the place.
16 posted on 10/07/2004 7:46:42 PM PDT by Chummy ("I Rather Know when I See BS." RepublicanAttackSquad.biz: "A vote 4 Kerry is a vote 4 Osama")
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To: VOA

other other non-Muslims (e.g., the Sudan)


17 posted on 10/07/2004 7:47:17 PM PDT by castlebrew
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To: Chummy
if it took American forces to some degree to coalesce the African Union

What the devil does this mean?

18 posted on 10/07/2004 7:50:41 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Cicero
Didn't he say he would be willing to send US troops during the first debate ?
19 posted on 10/07/2004 7:51:47 PM PDT by 1066AD
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To: 1066AD

Kerry balks at sending troops anywhere. If only we were French and willing to appease everyone (heavy sarcasm).


20 posted on 10/07/2004 7:57:51 PM PDT by Ginifer
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