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				 OT--Weasly watch begins 
 
			
			"NOYB"  wrote in message
 ...
 
 The guys is either back-tracking on things he's said in the past...or he's
 "not committing" right now.
 
 Let the Weasly Watch begin!
 
 
 September 20, 2003
 Clark Explains Statement on Authorization for Iraq War
 By JODI WILGOREN
 
 
 OWA CITY, Sept. 19 - On the third day of his campaign, Gen. Wesley K.
 Clark
 struggled today to clarify his statement on Thursday that he would
 "probably" have voted for the Congressional resolution authorizing the
 invasion of Iraq.
 
 General Clark, a former NATO commander who has retired from the Army,
 never
 denied making the statement in an interview with four reporters on his
 chartered plane. But he seemed stunned by the headlines that it generated,
 as supporters worried that he had undercut his position as an antiwar
 candidate with military bona fides.
 
 "I never would have voted for war," he said here this afternoon in an
 interview and in response to a question after a lecture at the University
 of
 Iowa. "What I would have voted for is leverage. Leverage for the United
 States to avoid a war. That's what we needed to avoid a war."
 
 Speaking about the resolution on Thursday, General Clark said, "At the
 time,
 I probably would have voted for it, but I think that's too simple a
 question."
 
 He then added: "I don't know if I would have or not. I've said it both
 ways,
 because when you get into this, what happens is you have to put yourself
 in
 a position. On balance, I probably would have voted for it."
 
 His clarification, along with a slapped-together schedule in which he met
 few voters and offered no specifics on domestic issues, seemed to reflect
 the inexperience of the first-time candidate and disorganization in his
 nascent campaign.
 
 His debut day in Iowa, whose early caucus is crucial to the Democratic
 Party's nomination process, was barely a toe touch, with a brief diner
 stop
 and a pageant of 10-minute news media interviews crammed between private
 receptions surrounding the long-scheduled nonpolitical lecture, for which
 a
 foundation paid $25,000. (General Clark receives 80 percent.)
 
 Despite his disappointment with reports of his airborne interview,
 including
 one in The New York Times, General Clark seemed as comfortable as could be
 in his new role as candidate, stopping frequently to slap shoulders as he
 strode across the university campus.
 
 Although he considered a presidential race for a month, he balked at most
 questions, saying he would spend this weekend at home in Little Rock,
 Ark.,
 working on policy positions. Among the issues he told voters he was not
 ready to discuss in detail were health care, education, employment, AIDS
 in
 Africa, the USA Patriot Act and medical marijuana. In interviews this
 afternoon, he referred to a talking-point tip sheet on the hot local
 issues
 of ethanol and farm subsidies.
 
 "I don't know enough to give you a comprehensive answer at this point," he
 said in response to a voter's question about universal health insurance.
 "I
 know enough not to give you a comprehensive answer at this point."
 
 Regarding a complicated proposal about financing AIDS research and
 prevention abroad, he said, "I'm not committing anything right now to
 anything, until I've got my economic facts and figures in order."
 
 snip
 
 
 
 
 
 
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