I am constructing a thread of actual things that Sen. Kerry said on the subject of Iraq. I am going back to 2002 and then going forward with significant speeches for which there are full written transcripts publicly available on the web. I want to put up some of the actual stuff, where it came from, if there is an audio or video link to the source material and the significance of it.
This thread is intended to provide pure research materials to be used in forming content for other posts or for the edification of the readers. Obviously, this is a work in progress and I'll add to it as I have time.
2002 comments on Iraqhttp://www.cfr.org/publication/5596/we_still_have_a_choice_on_iraq.htmlWe Still Have a Choice on Iraq
Author: John F. KerrySeptember 6, 2002
Foreign Affairs
Senator John Kerry, D-Mass.
New York Times
September 6, 2002
WASHINGTON -- It may well be that the United States will go to war with Iraq. But if so, it should be because we have to -- not because we want to. For the American people to accept the legitimacy of this conflict and give their consent to it, the Bush administration must first present detailed evidence of the threat of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction and then prove that all other avenues of protecting our nation's security interests have been exhausted. Exhaustion of remedies is critical to winning the consent of a civilized people in the decision to go to war. And consent, as we have learned before, is essential to carrying out the mission. President Bush's overdue statement this week that he would consult Congress is a beginning, but the administration's strategy remains adrift.
Regime change in Iraq is a worthy goal. But regime change by itself is not a justification for going to war. Absent a Qaeda connection, overthrowing Saddam Hussein -- the ultimate weapons-inspection enforcement mechanism -- should be the last step, not the first. Those who think that the inspection process is merely a waste of time should be reminded that legitimacy in the conduct of war, among our people and our allies, is not a waste, but an essential foundation of success.
If we are to put American lives at risk in a foreign war, President Bush must be able to say to this nation that we had no choice, that this was the only way we could eliminate a threat we could not afford to tolerate.
http://www.cfr.org/publication/5438/remarks_on_nbcs_meet_the_press.htmlRemarks on NBC's 'Meet the Press'
Author: John F. KerryDecember 1, 2002
NBS News
GUEST: Senator John Kerry, D-Mass.
MODERATOR: Tim Russert - NBC News
Sunday, December 1, 2002
MR. RUSSERT: America’s role in the world: one week from today, Saddam Hussein must provide to the United Nations a list of his weapons of mass destruction. If, in fact, he provides a list that President Bush deems to be in material breach, and the president decides to engage in military action against Iraq, even without the United Nations, would you support the president?
SEN. KERRY: Well, I don’t think that it’s that simple, and I hope it won’t be that simple. It shouldn’t be that simple. We see today on the front pages of our newspapers a prediction of a cost of a war conducted unilaterally by the United States of maybe $100 billion to $200 billion. That is, without even measuring the damage that could be caused to our relationship all across the globe with countries that we need. That’s if we proceeded hastily and unilaterally. I believe that would be an enormous mistake, Tim. We have a process in place. That process has to be legitimate.
I said last summer, early on, that this country, our country, the United States of America, should not go to war because it wants to go to war. We should go to war because we have to go to war. And we need the consent of the American people and we need legitimacy in order to do that. That’s why I and others argued so strongly that the president should go to the United Nations. And Secretary Powell and others ultimately won that position. We need to exhaust that possibility of those inspections working in a legitimate way so that we bring other countries with us. I went to New York to meet with the Security Council, and they assured me that if we go through that process, and, in the end, Saddam Hussein does not live up to his responsibilities, they are prepared to stand shoulder to shoulder with us, and they will bear some of the costs. On the other hand, if we go by ourselves, we are truly by ourselves. And I think that’s dangerous.
MR. RUSSERT: But, Senator, Saddam Hussein promised in 1991, under the truce for the Persian Gulf War, that he would not have weapons of mass destruction and he would provide evidence of that. If he provides evidence the president finds lacking, finds him in material breach, if the French, Russians, Chinese say, “Well, you know what? It’s not a big breach. Let’s give him another chance,” but the president of the United States says, “No, he’s breaking his word; we’re going.”
SEN. KERRY: Well, that’s different from what you said to me at first. If you do that Tim, if you have a breach that, by everybody’s standard, at least in the United States, those of us in the House and Senate, and the president, join together and make a judgment, this is indeed a material breach, and then others— some of them can’t be persuaded— that’s a different decision. But I don’t believe that it should be that difficult. In my judgment, if we have evidence, sufficient to show the materiality of the breach, we should be able to do what Adlai Stevenson did on behalf of the administration, Kennedy administration, and sit in front of the Security Council and say, “Here is the evidence. It’s time for all of you to put up. We need to all do this together.” And that’s what I think the resolution that was passed suggests.
MR. RUSSERT: But you would be willing to support the president without U.N. support?
SEN. KERRY: I would be willing to support the president providing there is an imminent threat that has been shown and that the breach reaches the standard that we all agree on. I will not support the president to proceed unilaterally if it is simply the president’s effort to try to do regime change without regard to the legitimacy of the inspection process or the legitimacy of the United Nations process itself. And I believe, Tim, very deeply, that that will cost our country in the long term in the war on terror and in many other ways that are going to be extraordinarily complex to undo for years to come. We need to proceed with legitimacy here. I congratulate the president up until now. I think in the last month he has been doing that. He is showing a patience with the inspection process. I think we need to let that run its course and this country will be stronger if we do./span>