Kerry Favors U.S. Trial of bin Laden
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, July 30, 2004
NEWBURGH, N.Y. John Kerry said Friday that as president he would put Osama bin Laden on trial in U.S. courts rather than an international
tribunal to ensure the "fastest, surest route" to a murder
conviction.
"I want him tried for murder in New York City, and in Virginia
and in Pennsylvania," where planes hijacked by al-Qaida operatives
crashed Sept. 11, 2001, Kerry said in his first interview as the
Democrat presidential nominee.
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The Saudi-bred terrorist is suspected of plotting attacks that
have shed blood across the globe, not just in the United States.
Kerry suggested he would place the highest priority on avenging
American deaths.
He called the Bush administration's attempt to create a Muslim
security force in Iraq an overdue act of desperation. "Great
idea," he said. "Should have been done from the very beginning."
Kerry, fielding questions about foreign policy, presidential
politics, abortion and the death penalty during an interview with
The Associated Press in this GOP-leaning Hudson Valley community,
took Bush and his Republican allies head-on.
"They don't have a record to run on so all they can do is
attack," Kerry said. He was responding to Bush, who a few minutes
earlier had said from the campaign trail that Kerry had no
significant achievements in Congress.
Word of the criticism drew a chuckle from the fourth-term
senator, who wore an open-collar shirt and slacks. "That's the
response to a positive campaign," he said sarcastically.
The night before, in his hometown of Boston, Kerry accepted the
Democrat nomination at a convention scripted to project a
positive, upbeat image to independent voters. The Democratic
National Committee launched a one-week, $6 million ad campaign that
features images of the convention, and party officials expect the
DNC's ads to turn negative this summer.
Noting that federal law limits his influence over DNC's ads, Kerry
didn't rule out airing his own ads critical of the White House.
"I'm going to certainly reserve the right to respond to these
people if they continually hack away," he said.
On the Muslim force initiative pushed by Saudi Arabia, Kerry
said, "Why is that being done as an act of desperation today rather
than two years ago before a lot of lives were lost?" He said it
was yet another lost opportunity to build a coalition that would
help ease the U.S. burden in money and lives.
"A change in the presidency is essential to our ability to
restore our respect" in the world, Kerry said.
"We broke relationships by rushing to war without allowing our
allies to work through their own politics and their own
reservations so they could come to the table, support it," he
said. "That is a breach of common sense about how you take a
nation to war."
'Terrorizing to the Person'
Kerry has long been an opponent of the death penalty, but in
recent years has made an exception for terrorism. The former
prosecutor said crimes such as rape and child murder do not warrant
the highest punishment.
"It's certainly terrorizing to the person who's undergoing it.
I understand that," Kerry said. "But terrorism is a political act
to terrorize a nation, to try to challenge a way of life and a
standard.. It's just a different act."
He said bin Laden deserved to die.
"I would go the fastest, surest route of conviction, and in my
belief that would be a trial for murder in the United States," the
Democrat said when asked if he would seek to try bin Laden at The
Hague.
Stepping gingerly into another social issue, Kerry reiterated
that he believed that life began at conception and that a woman
had the right to choose whether to abort.
Asked whether he believed abortion was taking a life, Kerry said
a fetus is a "form of life."
"The Bible itself - I mean, everything talks about different
layers of development. That's what Roe v Wade does. It talks about
viability. It's the law of the land." The Supreme Court's 1973 Roe
v Wade ruling legalized abortion in America.
"I don't believe personally that it's the government's job to
step in and take my article of faith and transfer it to somebody
who doesn't share that article of faith," said Kerry, a Roman
Catholic.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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