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Also by Associated Press correspondent:
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by Associated Press correspondent
Wednesday, October 6, 2004
CLEVELAND (AP) — Democratic Sen. John Edwards accused the Bush administration Tuesday night of bungling the war in Iraq and presiding over a historic loss of jobs. “Your facts are just wrong,” Vice President Dick Cheney shot back in a crackling campaign debate.
In a clash at close quarters, Edwards accused Cheney of “not being straight” with the American people about the war. He said U.S. casualties are rising monthly and the United States is bearing 90 percent of the cost and suffering 90 percent of the dead and wounded.
Cheney promptly challenged those figures, saying the Iraqi security forces had taken nearly half of the casualties.
“For you to demean their sacrifice is beyond the pale,” he said to Edwards, seated a few feet away.
The debate format encouraged give-and-take, and neither the vice president nor Sen. John Kerry’s running mate shrunk from the task.
“Frankly, Senator, you have a record that’s not very distinguished,” Cheney said to the North Carolina lawmaker after accusing him of a pattern of absences in the Senate during his one term.
Edwards summed up his points like the former trial lawyer he is. In a jab at the Bush-Cheney campaign’s claim on experience, he said, “Mr. Vice President, I don’t think the country can take four more years of this type of experience.”
Edwards said that in addition to mismanaging the war in Iraq, the administration had Osama bin Laden cornered in the mountains of Afghanistan at one point, but turned over the hunt for the mastermind behind the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks to Afghan warlords.
“The senator has got his facts wrong,” Cheney said. “We’ve never let up on Osama bin Laden from day one. We’ve actively and aggressively pursued him.”
Referring to Kerry’s debate with President Bush last week, Cheney said the four-term Massachusetts senator had declared he would submit American military commitments overseas to a global test.
He said that was part of a record that led Kerry to oppose the first Persian Gulf War in 1991 and left him “always being on the wrong side” of defense issues.
Cheney, whose daughter Mary is a lesbian, spoke supportively about gay relationships and said that “people ought to be free to choose any arrangement they want.” At the same time, Bush supports passage of a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, and Cheney said, “He sets policy for this administration, and I support him.”
Edwards said it was obvious that the Cheneys loved their daughter and that “you can’t have anything but respect” for them.
“I believe marriage is between a man and a woman and so does John Kerry,” Edwards said. But, he added, “We should not use the Constitution to divide this country.”
Edwards also charged that Cheney, as the chief executive officer of Halliburton, pushed to lift U.S. sanctions against Iran, did business with countries that were “sworn enemies of the United States,” and that Halliburton paid millions of dollars in fines for providing false information “just like Enron and Ken Lay,” the now indicted former chief.
Cheney accused Edwards of “trying to throw up a smoke screen,” and added, “there’s no substance to the charges.”
Cheney, 63, and Edwards, 51, sat a few feet apart around a semicircular table on a stage at Case Western Reserve University. Gwen Ifill of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), moderator for the evening, faced them.
It was the only debate of the campaign for Cheney and his Democratic opponent.
Kerry and Bush debated for 90 minutes last week in an encounter widely viewed as a victory for the Democratic challenger. The four-term Massachusetts senator has gained ground in the polls in the days since, narrowing the gap with the president in some nationwide surveys and moving into a statistical tie in others.
Bush and Kerry will debate twice more, on Friday in St. Louis and Oct. 13 in Arizona.



