From the Los Angeles Times
THE NATION
New PAC to Back Antiwar Veterans
The group will work to elect candidates who can promote
a change of
strategy for Iraq.
By Ronald Brownstein
Times Staff Writer
January 26, 2006
WASHINGTON — An organization of veterans disillusioned with President
Bush's handling of the Iraq war plans to launch a political action
committee today dedicated to electing antiwar veterans to Congress.
The Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America PAC hopes to raise as much
as $10 million this year to support veterans seeking House and Senate
seats on platforms promoting a change of strategy in Iraq, said Jon
Soltz, the group's executive director.
"These are people we
want to send to Washington to articulate a better understanding of the
war," said Soltz, who served as an Army captain with the 1st Armored
Division in Iraq. "We need credible knowledge inside Washington to
change the course of this war."
So far, eight Iraq war veterans
are seeking House seats as Democrats in various states, including
Illinois, Pennsylvania and Maryland.
Paul Hackett, a Marine
reservist who served in Iraq, is seeking the Democratic Senate
nomination in Ohio. The seat is held by Republican Mike DeWine, who is
seeking reelection. Hackett narrowly lost a special election for a
House seat to Republican Jean Schmidt last year.
One Iraq veteran, Van Taylor, is seeking a House seat in Texas as a
Republican.
Although the leaders of the new PAC say it will support candidates from
both parties, their pedigree and agenda lean strongly toward Democrats.
In 2004, Soltz coordinated veterans' outreach in Pennsylvania for the
presidential campaign of Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.). Former NATO
Supreme Cmdr. Wesley K. Clark, a contender for the 2004 Democratic
presidential nomination, will head the new group's advisory board.
Charles W. Larson Jr., a Republican state senator in Iowa who served in
Iraq as an Army major, said the group's criticism of the war
"categorically does not represent returning veterans."
"If
there is one truism that I find with returning veterans, it is that
they have seen the success we've accomplished in Afghanistan and Iraq,
and they believe in the mission and want to complete it," said Larson,
who last summer founded the group Families United for Our Troops and
Their Mission.
The new PAC's policy agenda — which Soltz said
candidates must endorse to obtain its support — makes it unlikely it
would support many, if any, Republicans.
The group has not
endorsed a timetable for withdrawing American troops from Iraq,
according to a policy statement it plans to release today. But the
statement says Bush must produce "a victory strategy for Iraq that
includes hard" measurements of success that trigger the reduction of
U.S. troop deployment.
The statement also charges that the administration failed to provide
soldiers in Iraq adequate body armor and other equipment.
Taylor, the Iraq veteran running for a House seat in Texas, disputed
that accusation.
"I was given everything I needed to complete the mission," said Taylor,
who served as a Marine in Iraq. "No one has ever gone to war with
enough stuff, enough information, enough training. You always want
more."
The new PAC intends to prod candidates to endorse
increasing active-duty military personnel and greater funding for the
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Soltz said he hoped the group
would raise enough money to work against incumbents who cast votes the
PACs sees as anti-veteran.
"Part of our goal is holding accountable elected officials in
Washington who have voted for the war and against the troops."
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times