I'm sure that Kerry and Braun support it also. I'm not sure about Clark but I wasn't too reassured when he wrote a few years ago, in an article, that Gaza & the West Bank, where the Intifada was happening, were inside of Israel.
Dean
Repost from Alex88:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=108&topic_id=5282 :
In this interview with Howard Dean by David Corn, at 34:50 on the Real Player counter, after answering the question of whether or not he thinks "the US should be applying pressure on Sharon as well as Arafat to get things moving", Howard Dean volunteered the following statement.
"One of the essential ingredients, interestingly in the Middle East is the fence. I was against the fence before I went to Israel, now I think it's critical, because it creates a fact on the ground, which means it's essentially along the border that Arafat and Barak almost agreed to and it also labels the settlements that will eventually have to be withdrawn when the army's decided are indefensable in order to get to a real peace settlement."
http://www.nationinstitute.org/radionation/===============================================================
Each of the following four articles linked here help describe this "fence'. The first one has maps.
"The "Separation Wall" - separating Palestinians from their land... "
"The Wall is the concrete manifestation of the Israeli Occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and yet another method of carrying out a policy of confiscating more Palestinian land. If Israel would genuinely be interested in the security of its citizens, and in separation from the Palestinian people, it would have erected the wall on the "Green Line"(the border that existed before the 1967 war). But this is not the case. The majority of the planned wall cuts deep into Palestinian territory, incorporating into Israel about 10%-15% of the occupied territories, a huge portion of very fertile land full of olive groves, greenhouses, vegetable fields and water resources. It will cut off villages and towns from their farmland, centres of trade, education and culture. It will intensify the ongoing environmental destruction and degradation taking place in the occupied territories. It is also an attempt to legitimise the Israeli settlement policy. In short, it is intended to be a death blow to any possibility of a viable Palestinian state.
For hundreds of thousands of Palestinian farmers, the wall will represent a prison with no warden
with no means of sustaining their families - to the point that will force many of them to simply leave their homes, and try living elsewhere as refugees.
This is an intention of quiet ethnic cleansing, the sort that cannot be photographed, but is nevertheless as effective and devastating.
for this reason, we have decided to refer to the wall as a transfer wall."
http://www.gush-shalom.org/thewall/index.html"The Fence Crosses Agricultural Roads and Pathways and Cuts Off Residents from their Water Resources, Schools,Businesses and Public Services"
http://www.gush-shalom.org/thewall/worldbank.html "A Wall in their Heart"
"A look at the map leads to a simple conclusion - the separation fence being built at this time basically overlaps the Sharon map for a Palestinian state. A bit more than 40% of the West Bank, split and sliced into pieces. The northern West Bank is cut off from the
southern West Bank and to go from Bethlehem to Ramallah a Palestinian will have to cross two border crossings"
""You leave us no room to grow, you leave us no room to live," says Jamal Juma. The only thing left the Palestinians is to live in huge pens and to work in industrial zones that will no doubt be built in the settlements, near the openings to these pens. "You want us to live like slaves"
http://www.gush-shalom.org/archives/wall_yediot_eng.html"'The misleading term 'fence'"
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=318686&contrassID=2&subContrassID=4&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y