Kucinch Challenges Obama on Iran Nuke Development
Kucinich for President 2008
http://www.kucinich.us
Kucinch Challenges Obama on Alleged Iran Nuke Development
Washington, DC Thursday - - (April 27) - - Presidential candidate and US Congressman Dennis Kucinich today challenged Senator Barack Obama's assertion, made in an exchange with Kucinich in yesterday's Democratic Presidential Debate in Orangeburg, South Carolina that Iran is in the process of developing nuclear weapons.
"In last night's debate, Senator Obama revealed that he has fallen into the same trap which wrongly took us into war against Iraq. In one breath he conjured Iran as a threat: ('But, have no doubt, Iran possessing nuclear weapons will be a major threat to us and to the region.')
"And in the next breath he asserted that according to experts, Iran is developing nuclear weapons. : ' . . . but they're in the process of developing it. And I don't think that's disputed by any expert.' "Where is Senator Obama's proof for such a provocative statement?" Kucinich asked.
Kucinich said that in the exchange with Senator Obama he tried to interject the fact that Mohammed El Baradei of the International Atomic Energy Agency, recently asserted " . the difference between acquiring knowledge and having a bomb is at least five to ten years away. And that's why I said the intelligence, the British, intelligence, the American intelligence, is saying that Iran is still years, five to ten years away from developing a weapon. "
Senator Obama's assertion is eerily reminiscent of the statements of President George Bush, Vice President Cheney and other top ranking members of the Bush Administration, who, back in 2002 and 2003 falsely claimed Iraq was a threat to the United States and our allies, that Iraq was developing weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear weapons capability.
Kucinich at the time wrote and
circulated an analysis http://kucinich.us/iraqplan of all false
claims made by the Bush Administration. "Clearly all other
Senators running for President failed to
read the easily
accessible intelligence reports, hence their alleged
'mistaken' vote to invade Iraq," said Kucinich, the only
Democratic Presidential candidate to vote against both the
authorization for war and
any funding of the
war.
"While Iran has taken steps to develop nuclear power, which is the right of all signatories to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, there is absolutely no evidence whatsoever they are developing nuclear weapons," explained Kucinich.
"Senator Obama's doctrine with respect to Iran
is 'All options are on the table,' which is unmistakably a
euphemism for the consideration of a preemptive attack
against Iran, including the use of nuclear weapons, which
the Administration has shipped to the region. Senator
Obama's rhetoric parrots speeches given by both President
Bush and Vice President Cheney, as
well as Democratic
Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and John Edwards
regarding Iran."
"When you consider that last month the Congress took out of the Iraq Supplemental appropriation a provision that would have required congressional approval of a military attack on Iran, Senator Obama's faulty analysis and his mischaracterizations license an attack. This is the same kind of disastrous, faulty thinking that led us into war against Iraq and raises serious questions about Senator Obama's judgement on matters of national security."
Kucinich has long advocated reestablishing diplomatic ties with Iran as a means of deescalating tensions, opening up full diplomatic relations, resuming meaningful inspections of Iran's nuclear power program, and enlisting Iran's support in helping to end the war in Iraq.
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