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Democratic Party of Wisconsin Chair Calls on McCain to Show Responsibility and Offer Plan for Iraq
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Democratic
Party of Wisconsin Chair Calls on McCain to
Show Responsibility and Offer Plan
for Iraq
Even as
rockets exploded in the so-called "Green Zone"
yesterday in Baghdad, John McCain chose
to launch another round of
irresponsible political attacks rather than
offer a real plan for the future in
Iraq.
The attack came though a majority of Americans
support troop withdrawal, and
89 percent of Americans think the cost of the
war has contributed to the
economic problems in our country. [New
York
Times, 4/4/08] With General
Petraeus testifying before the Senate today,
John McCain is still silent on the
issue of political progress in
Iraq
and where we go from here.
"Adopting
George W. Bush's penchant for cherry-picking
the facts and misleading the
American people is the wrong approach for John
McCain, and the wrong approach
for America,"
Democratic Party of Wisconsin Chairman
Joe
Wineke
said. "With 87 troops from Wisconsin
already having lost their lives in
Iraq,
Wisconsinites want to hear a plan for
Iraq
going forward, not political
attacks designed to distract from McCain's
lack of answers on the war. John
McCain ought to exercise real responsibility
and provide Wisconsinites and
every American with a real plan for
Iraq."
In his Kansas City remarks
yesterday, McCain never explained if
he agrees with General Petraeus' concerns that
Iraq's
leaders are failing to make
the political progress the surge was supposed
to make possible, and never
explained what he would do to encourage that
critical political progress. And
while McCain’s campaign continues to backtrack
from his willingness to keep our
troops in Iraq for 100
years, McCain himself refused to say whether
he plans to build permanent bases
in Iraq.
And, despite the tremendous economic cost of
the war, McCain never said how he
plans to pay for his ‘stay the course’
strategy in Iraq while making President
Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy permanent - a
prescription for trillions of
dollars in new debt.
"The
American people know that ‘100 years’ is not a
plan," Wineke added,
"and that a Commander-in-Chief has to explain
not just what he'll do in
Iraq, but also to bring balance to our Army
and National Guard. If Wisconsin voters can't
count on a plan from McCain while
he's running for President, what should they
expect if he were to become
President?"
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