John Kerry
Related: About this forumYvonneCa
(10,117 posts)...that he spoke to the character needed in our leaders...and to Romney in particular.
Thank you for your service, Senator Kerry.
karynnj
(59,923 posts)karynnj
(59,923 posts)Here are two of the better,
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/06/john-kerry-mitt-romney-iran_n_1325059.html
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2012/03/06/kerry-takes-aim-at-romney-over-iran/comment-page-1/#comments
The comments are actually supportive in the main for Kerry and very negative on Romney.
Here is the Boston Globe - good article and typical right wing nonsense in the comments - though there are some agreeing with Kerry who need to point out they don't like him. http://www.boston.com/Boston/politicalintelligence/2012/03/senator-john-kerry-attacks-mitt-romney-against-obama-iran-policy/9UYuD9VnhyFmv7N03qPtLJ/index.html
What is nice is that all seem to be covering some of Kerry's main points, showing how well crafted the Senate speech was.
Mass
(27,315 posts)Kerry to Romney: You dont know Iran
Posted By Josh Rogin Tuesday, March 6, 2012 - 5:03 PM Share
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-MA) took to the Senate floor Tuesday to pick apart Mitt Romney's latest op-ed on Iran.
"The United States cannot afford to let Iran acquire nuclear weapons. Yet under Barack Obama, that is the course we are on," Romney wrote in Tuesday's Washington Post. "As president, I would move America in a different direction."
...
Kerry said on the floor today that Romney's op-ed troubled him and he said Romney's attack on the administration's Iran policy was "as inaccurate as it was aggressive." The timing of the op-ed, when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in Washington, was additionally unfortunate, in Kerry's view.
"We should all remember that the nuclear issue with Iran is deadly serious business that should invite sobriety and serious-minded solutions, not sloganeering and sound bites. This can't become just another applause line on the Republican presidential stump," Kerry said. "Talk has consequences, and idle talk of war only helps Iran by spooking the tight oil market and increasing the price of the Iranian crude that pays for its nuclear program. And to create false differences with the president just to score political points does nothing to move Iran off a dangerous nuclear course."
"Worst of all, Governor Romney's op-ed does not even do readers the courtesy of describing how a President Romney would do anything different from what the Obama administration has already done," Kerry said. "Just look at this op-ed. From his opening paragraphs, Romney garbles history."
Kerry disputed Romney's assertion that President Jimmy Carter's efforts to negotiate the release of U.S. hostages in Iran in 1981 was "feckless," and his claim that Obama was the most "feckless" president since Carter, considering he ordered the raid that killed Osama bin Laden.
"I don't know if Governor Romney has checked the definition of the word feckless' lately, but that ain't it," Kerry said.
...
"So when you add it all up, Mitt Romney is just trying to ignore, twist, and distort the administration's policy to drive a wedge in our politics," Kerry said. "We're going to have a bruising election season. And so we should. That's how we decide big issues in the United States. We always have. But let's have an honest debate, not a contrived one. Governor Romney can debate the man in the White House instead of inventing straw men on the op-ed pages."
Obama himself criticized the GOP presidential candidates for their rhetoric on the possibility of a war with Iran during his press conference today.
"You know, those folks don't have a lot of responsibilities. They're not commander in chief. And when I see the casualness with which some of these folks talk about war, I'm reminded of the costs involved in war. I'm reminded that the decision that I have to make in terms of sending our young men and women into battle and the impact that has on their lives, the impact it has on our national security, the impact it has on our economy," Obama said.
"This is not a game. And there's nothing casual about it. And, you know, when I see some of these folks who have a lot of bluster and a lot of big talk, but when you actually ask them specifically what they would do, it turns out they repeat the things that we've been doing over the last three years, it indicates to me that that's more about politics than actually trying to solve a difficult problem."
Things that needed to be said. Oba,a also said them, some, earleir today. These guys are playing with fire and it's scary and they should know better (and probably do know, in ROmney's case at least, but do not care, which is even worse).
YvonneCa
(10,117 posts)...look for the text. Wasn't he great?