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Fallon Questions Boswell’s Stand on Iraq -
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Tuesday, April 8, 2008 (1:00 PM
CDT) – Today, Ed Fallon questioned Congressman
Leonard Boswell’s stand on the Iraq War.
“Congressman Boswell has been disingenuous of
late in trying to portray himself as being
against the Iraq War,” said Fallon, who is
challenging Boswell in the June 3rd
primary. Fallon noted that the public record
shows Boswell voted with a minority of House
Democrats to authorize using military force in
Iraq in 2002, and that he was still voting as
recently as last May (H.R. 2237) against
timetables for withdrawal and as late as June
in support of funding that didn’t contain
timetables (H.R. 2764). Fallon challenged
Boswell to a public debate on the issue,
saying, “Congressman Boswell should either
acknowledge that his consistent support of the
war for five years was a mistake and apologize
for it, or come out in the open and defend his
record.”
“Congressman Boswell
has said that he ‘voted five or six times’ for
withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq, but he
never gives references to those votes,” Fallon
said, citing an article in The Des
Moines Register on March 8th. “I
know of three votes on H.R. 1591 and one vote
on H.R. 4156. I’d like to see to what votes he
is referring.”
Fallon also listed
three questions he would ask General David
Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker if he were
already in Congress. Both the American
commanding general for Iraq and the U.S.
ambassador to Iraq are scheduled to testify
before Congress today and
tomorrow.
Noting that Gen.
Petraeus himself recently acknowledged that
there has been insufficient political progress
in Iraq– the purported reason for the surge –
Fallon said he would ask if the surge has been
a strategic failure. In response to Army
figures that 25% of soldiers on their third and
fourth tours of duty are suffering serious
mental health problems, Fallon said he would
ask what is being done to address these issues
to help our troops and veterans. Finally, given
the fact that we are less safe today than when
the war began, the human cost in American and
Iraqi lives, and the estimated three trillion
dollar price tag of this war that is crippling
our economy, he asks how they justify the
continued presence of American forces in
Iraq.
“I’ve opposed the
Iraq War since before it began,” Fallon said,
“but now we have to clean up the mess that the
Bush Administration has made and redirect
funding from the war to address problems here
at home, beginning with our economy.”
Pointing out that
Gen. Petraeus himself said a year ago, “There
is no military solution to a problem like
Iraq,” Fallon said he has endorsed A
Responsible Plan to End the War in Iraq, an
initiative supported by many congressional
candidates, retired military officers
(including a former commanding general in
Iraq), and assistant secretaries of defense.
“I support this plan
because it does more than simply end U.S.
military action in Iraq,” Fallon said. “It
calls for the use of U.S. diplomatic power to
restore stability to Iraq and the region, and
it addresses humanitarian concerns. It restores
our military and supports our veterans. And, to
help prevent such a war in the future, it takes
steps to restore our Constitution and
independence to the media, and creates a new
U.S.-centered energy
policy.”
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