Iraq War Draws Veterans into Politics
Wed Feb 8, 2006 17:10

 
Band of Brothers is a new political organization formed to assist Democratic veterans running for elected office. We’ve already identified more than 50 fighting men and women who need our help to challenge the current administration on its failed policies at home and abroad.

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Iraq War Draws Veterans into Politics
The Associated Press

Tuesday 07 February 2006


Colorado Springs, CO - After 20 years in the Air Force and Bronze Star service during the 1991 Gulf War, Democrat Jay Fawcett decided to come home and run for Congress, largely out of disgust with the way American troops were being used in Iraq.

"I think it's just gotten to the point where a significant number of us who've served are looking at this administration particularly - and Congress doesn't get off the hook - and saying, `What're you doing? What's the plan?"' he said.

Fawcett is part of a large and possibly unprecedented number of former soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines running for Congress this year.

About 40 of the candidates are Republicans, while at least 55 are Democrats. By one count, at least 11 veterans of the Iraq war or Afghanistan are hoping to get elected to the House or Senate, all but one of them Democrats.

The fighting Democrats, as some call themselves, say their military experience could give them the credibility to criticize the war without being dismissed out of hand by the GOP as naive and weak on defense, as the Bush administration has often done.

"One of the things I think is behind this movement is, we're not stupid in the military. We know when we've been used and misused," Navy veteran Bill Winter, a Democrat who hopes to challenge GOP Rep. Tom Tancredo in the Republican suburbs of Denver.

Former Sen. Max Cleland, D-Ga., who lost both legs and an arm while serving in Vietnam, said the Iraq war veterans running as Democrats will offer "a direct rebuttal" to the administration on the Iraq war.

"This administration, come April, will be going into the fourth year of this war after the president said three weeks into it `Major combat over, mission accomplished, bring them on,"' Cleland said. "You tell me who's out of touch. It's not these Iraqi veterans that are coming back and saying, `This is not the way it was on the ground there, and I'm going to do something to change this."'

Carl Forti, spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee, said Democrats are trying "to manufacture momentum wherever they can find it."

"The sad reality is that most of those people the (Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee) is promoting are in districts they can't possibly win," Forti said. "It doesn't make much sense to me."

Fawcett, who spent years as a defense contractor after leaving the Air Force, wants to take on Republican Rep. Joel Hefley in a Colorado Springs-area district that has one of the country's biggest concentrations of veterans. It includes the Air Force Academy, two Air Force bases, a major Army installation and NORAD, the air defense command. The district has been represented by a Republican since the seat was created more than three decades ago.

The roster of Democratic veterans includes engineers, teachers, lawyers, business owners and a pastor. Their stands on the war range from calling for immediate withdrawal to demanding a clearer timetable and a way out. Fawcett, for example, says that pulling out now would be a mistake, but that the Bush administration has failed to clearly state its goals and an exit strategy.

Among other veterans running for office:

* Marine reservist Paul Hackett, who served in Iraq and is running for the Senate in Ohio. The Democrat narrowly lost a special House election last year in a district where President Bush won 64 percent of the vote in 2004.

* Former Army Maj. L. Tammy Duckworth, a helicopter pilot who lost her legs in a grenade attack in Iraq. She is running as a Democrat for the Illinois congressional seat of retiring Republican Rep. Henry Hyde. She said she privately disagreed with Bush's decision to invade Iraq but still volunteered to serve. "We should have been fighting the enemies that attacked us at home on 9/11," she said in December. "We should have been out there trying to catch Osama bin Laden."

* Democrat Eric Massa, a 24-year Navy officer challenging freshman Republican Rep. Randy Kuhl in western New York.

Elections after the end of World War II and the Vietnam War also saw large numbers of veterans running for Congress.

Republicans this time around could have a difficult time countering opposition to the administration's war plan - or the war itself - from veteran-Democrats, said Gary Jacobson, a congressional scholar at the University of California at San Diego.

"Popular sentiment is not terribly pro-war now, and there's lots of doubts about the administration's honesty and the purposes of the war," he said. "So if you have a veteran come back and start trashing the war, that's a problem for Republicans."

Still, a veteran cannot count on a win, said Ed Patru, another spokesman for the Republican congressional committee.

"Being a veteran, it's great to have that on your resume," he said. "People appreciate veterans, but if you're wrong on taxes and the economy, the bread-and-butter, kitchen-tabletop kind of issues, being a veteran is not going to save you."

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On the Net:

Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America PAC: http://www.iavapac.org

Band of Brothers: http://www.bandofbrothers2006.org

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Response to the Attacks on Rep. Murtha

We’re all aware of the recent attacks on Rep. John P. Murtha’s (D-PA) war record as reported in the Washington Post. Band of Brothers has been chartered on the very principle that’s under siege here: that veterans who served this country diligently should not have their war records questioned and attacked by partisan entities through the press without a watchdog ready to bite them back when they’re out of line. Thanks to a transparently opinionated and politically motivated attack, a lot of American viewers, readers, and voters now believe that John Murtha, a man who put his life in harm’s way in defense of our country, did not get wounded enough to deserve the purple hearts he was awarded.

Here’s a question: If this is really a news item, if John Murtha didn’t deserve the recognition or medals he received, then isn’t the story here that there’s a problem with the panel of military officers who awarded them, or the criteria set forth by the DOD? No, that’s not the story, because that’s not the case.

Band of Brothers is determined to be a referee for this sort of fight, making sure the men and women who have honorably served our nation don’t get the same rabbit punch from the GOP that John McCain, Max Cleland, John Kerry, and now John Murtha have gotten. We’ll purchase air time and ad space right away, denouncing these tactics. We will not sit by and let the Republicans ruin the concept of an all-volunteer military through policy AND politics. A man or woman serving in Iraq shouldn’t have to dodge bullets today and worry about their service being questioned, discounted and slandered in the future. The more than 50 veterans currently seeking office shouldn’t either.
http://www.bandofbrothers2006.org/

Candidates: 56 and Counting

(More candidate information coming soon. If you are a veteran running for Congress as a Democrat, please contact us at info@bandofbrothers2006.org.)
http://www.bandofbrothers2006.org/candidates/

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Kenneth L. Vardon, a/k/a APFN@apfn.org


"RADIO YOUR WAY"
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent"
-- Thomas Jefferson -

 

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