http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/12/29/edwards-talks-about-his-war-vote/Edwards Talks About His War Vote
By Julie Bosman
KNOXVILLE, Iowa – John Edwards can frequently be heard on the campaign trail blasting President Bush’s management of the Iraq war.
He rarely volunteers that as a senator from North Carolina in 2002, he voted to authorize that war. And it is also rare for him to be confronted about that fact in public.
At a town hall forum here, the entire room was hushed as a man in the audience, emotion visible in his voice, stood and addressed Mr. Edwards.
“I would like to know,” he began. “Why did you vote for that war in Iraq? Did you actually feel that it was necessary? Did you actually feel that man had weapons that were an imminent threat to the United States?”
Mr. Edwards jumped in. “Let me answer you,” he said. “It’s a very good question and completely – can I just tell you? I’m always happy when somebody asks me that question, because I worry that people are thinking about it and don’t want to ask.”
He spoke for nearly four minutes, explaining that as a member of the Senate, and a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, he got direct information on what was happening inside Iraq. And he met with high-level members of the former Clinton administration, he said, who verified what he was hearing.
“Even at the time, with all that information, I had great reservations about George Bush,” he continued. “I didn’t trust him. I thought he had an agenda. And in the end, I decided to defer to him because he was the president. It was a mistake.”
And Mr. Edwards offered some other details about when he began to reconsider his vote: after the election in 2004, he said, when his wife, Elizabeth, was diagnosed with cancer.
While Mrs. Edwards was undergoing chemotherapy and sedated, Mr. Edwards would wait, he said. “I spent a lot of time, just sitting there by myself,” he said “I came to the decision, over a period of months, that I was dead wrong and I had to say so.”
So Mr. Edwards wrote an op-ed piece for The Washington Post, he said: “The first sentence was, ‘I was wrong.’ ”
He did not take any more questions.