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Harold Ford on War & Peace

Democratic Representative (TN-9)


Divide up Iraq into Sunni, Shia & Kurd regions

Q: How will you end the war in Iraq and bring the troops home?

FORD: The stay-the-course strategy that Pres. Bush has pursued for 3 years is not working. There are other options, other than stay-the-course or cut-and-run. I believe that we can decentralize Iraq and still keep it together. Divide the country into three regions--Sunni, Shia, Kurd--give each regional autonomy, and help create a central government with authority over the borders and the ability to divide the oil revenue equally.

FORD: A month ago, Corker said we should stay the course. I don't believe we should do that. Decentralization, modeled after Bosnia, would reduce the violence and let the people build the country their way

Source: 2006 TN Senate debate, at University of Chattanooga Oct 10, 2006

If you want to stay the course, I'm not your guy

For four years we have stayed the course. If you want to stay the course, I'm not your guy. If you believe America is better than what they have given us in the last six years, I'm asking for your vote.
Source: 2006 TN Senate debate, at University of Chattanooga Oct 10, 2006

Bush failed to define serious long-term nature of Iraq

Ford made his fourth visit to Iraq and heard positive reports from the troops there. "Morale this time was higher than it's ever been," he said. "The mood was good," said Ford.

Ford said Pres. Bush did a poor job at the outset of the war communicating to the American people the serious long-term nature of US involvement in Iraq, and was too quick to declare victory in the military conflict. "He declared it over long before it was over," said Ford.

Source: Campaign website, www.haroldfordjr.com, press release Jan 20, 2006

Voted NO on declaring Iraq part of War on Terror with no exit date.