Presumed Democratic nominee Barack Obama today repeated his vow to quickly end the war in Iraq, promised to finish the fight against al Qaeda, and sought to draw a bright line between his opposition to the war and his GOP opponent John McCain's support for it.
"George Bush and John McCain don't have a strategy for success in Iraq—they have a strategy for staying in Iraq," he said during his morning speech at the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington. The war, he said, has not only translated into lost lives and squandered billions but has led to the neglect of other "emerging threats."
The speech, a Sunday opinion piece in the New York Times that outlined his Iraq position, and a television ad released today that is intended to highlight his efforts to secure nuclear weapons are all part of Obama's all-out effort to establish his national security bona fides in advance of the fall race with McCain.
And his Republican opponent has been firing back all week. Today in Arizona during a town meeting, McCain scrapped prepared comments on the economy in favor a speech of his own - one that defended his support of the surge and attempted to paint Obama as a neophyte "trying to sound tough."
"I won't bluster, and I won't make idle threats," McCain said, touting his "many years of political and military experience." The Arizona senator talked about the strategy needed to stabilize Afghanistan, including sending in more troops and unifying the command in the country.
"In wartime," he said, "judgment and experience matter."
The first question from the town meeting audience? What can helpless-feeling Americans do about the price of gasoline?




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John of IN 5:35PM October 29, 2008
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