... situation for the next Democrat to handle?
Sen. Carl Levin isn't ready to commit yet to any of the nine Democratic candidates for president, but he is intrigued by the entry of Gen. Wesley Clark into the crowded field.
"Clark getting in is a very significant element for two reasons," Levin said. "He is an impressive person. He brings credibility that would eliminate this whole commander-in-chief approach that Bush is taking, basically running on 9_11, running on what was perceived as a strong suit on foreign policy and security policy."
Levin made his remarks Wednesday in a wide-ranging conversation with Observer & Eccentric editors.
The senator said fellow Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts was the only other candidate with similar military credentials. Kerry is a decorated Vietnam veteran. But Levin said he had been impressed by Clark's testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee last year and his foresight into potential problems with Iraq.
"Clark, before the war, was very strong that we don't have a post-war plan for the problems we'll have. He said we'll have to go to the U.N. and work a plan," Levin said.
Levin said Bush's "pre-emptive doctrine" presented a lot of problems, essentially giving other nations an excuse for invading their enemies.
"You can't attack every country," he said. "North Korea is a bigger problem than Iraq. They have weapons of mass destruction. They proclaim it. They want us to believe they have weapons of mass destruction as a deterrent."
Levin said it was important to work with allies in Asia on containment and to find ways to help North Korea work out of its isolation and poverty.
http://www.hometownlife.com/news/WestBloomfieldEccentric/default.asp?Page=10-12-2003/FullStory/10_12_03.1st.15.htm