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bigtree

(85,996 posts)
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 01:30 PM Jan 2013

David Corn: When John Kerry Was a Lone Hero in Congress

from Mother Jones: http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2013/01/when-john-kerry-secretary-of-state-1980s-hero


____ In the heat of battle, with his campaign crumbling, Howard Dean lashed out at John Kerry. First, he called the leader in the Democratic presidential race a "Republican." Then he said, "When Senator Kerry's record is examined by the public at a more leisurely time...he's going to turn out to be just like George Bush."

Just like George Bush? It is true that Kerry, another Yalie and Skull and Bones alum, has voted in favor of NAFTA and other corporate-friendly trade pacts, that he once raised questions about affirmative action (while still supporting it), that he has, like almost every Democratic senator, accepted contributions from special-interest lobbyists (while being one of the few to eschew political action committee donations), that he voted to grant Bush the authority to invade Iraq. But this hardly makes him Bush lite. There is, as evidence, his nineteen-year Senate record, during which he has voted consistently in favor of abortion rights and environmental policies, opposed Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy, led the effort against drilling in the Alaskan wilderness, pushed for higher fuel economy standards, advocated boosting the minimum wage and pressed for global warming remedies. But what distinguishes Kerry's career are key moments when he displayed guts and took tough actions that few colleagues would imitate. One rap on Kerry is that he is overly cautious and conventional. He's no firebrand on the stump, nor does he come across as the most passionate and exciting force for change. But his history in Washington includes episodes in which he demonstrated a willingness to confront hard issues, to challenge power, to pursue values rather than political advantage, to take risks for the public interest.

Kerry arrived in the Senate in 1985. This Vietnam War hero turned antiwar leader had been lieutenant governor of Massachusetts. But he entered the body more as the prosecutor he had been in the late 1970s after graduating from Boston College law school. In early 1986 Kerry's office was contacted by a Vietnam vet who alleged that the support network for the CIA-backed Nicaraguan contras (who were fighting against the socialist Sandinistas in power) was linked to drug traffickers. Kerry doubted that the Reagan Administration, obsessed with supporting the contras, would investigate such charges. He pushed for a Senate inquiry and a year later, as chairman of a Foreign Relations subcommittee, obtained approval to conduct a probe.

It was not an easy ride. Reagan Justice Department officials sought to discredit and stymie his investigation. Republicans dismissed it. One anti-Kerry effort used falsified affidavits to make it seem his staff had bribed witnesses. The Democratic staff of the Senate Iran/contra committee--which showed little interest in the contra drug connection--often refused to cooperate. "They were fighting us tooth and nail," recalls Jack Blum, one of Kerry's investigators. "We had the White House and the CIA against us on one side and our colleagues in the Senate on the other. But Kerry told us, 'Keep going.' He didn't let this stuff faze him."

After the contra investigation, Kerry next turned to a far more sensitive target: a bank connected to a prominent Democratic Party fundraiser. During their investigation of Noriega, Kerry's staff discovered that the Bank of Credit and Commerce International had facilitated Noriega's drug trafficking and money laundering. This led to an inquiry into BCCI, a worldwide but murky institution more or less controlled by the ruling family of Abu Dhabi . . .


read more: http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2013/01/when-john-kerry-secretary-of-state-1980s-hero


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David Corn: When John Kerry Was a Lone Hero in Congress (Original Post) bigtree Jan 2013 OP
Senator Kerry has had one of ProSense Jan 2013 #1
it's funny bigtree Jan 2013 #4
Great read. TY for posting. Kerry stood alone against massive corruption think Jan 2013 #2
"What about me? I was an, um, zero, too." - George Bush the Lesser (Rebublicon) Berlum Jan 2013 #3

ProSense

(116,464 posts)
1. Senator Kerry has had one of
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 01:44 PM
Jan 2013

the most interesting Senate careers. From Iran/Contra to BCCI to the Vietnam MIAs to this hearing, fascinating.

bigtree

(85,996 posts)
4. it's funny
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 04:15 PM
Jan 2013

. . .how his efforts to hold Bush accountable for his determination to invade Iraq were used in a way that ignored and belittled his tenacious effort to end that occupation. No matter what Congress did, Bush would have deployed troops and dared them to pull support. A President Kerry would have withdrawn them immediately from Iraq. He also sought to mitigate the President's insistence on escalating the Afghanistan occupation's offensive campaign with his diplomatic initiative achieving one of the largest aid packages in our history in that region to Pakistan.

 

think

(11,641 posts)
2. Great read. TY for posting. Kerry stood alone against massive corruption
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 02:09 PM
Jan 2013

on both sides of the isle as well in the Reagan administration.

His efforts during the Iran/contra scandal should never be forgotten.

Another article worth reading to learn more about Kerry and Iran/Contra is here:

http://www.salon.com/2004/10/25/contra/

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