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Bush, Kerry painting some scary
scenarios
Minnesota -
Terrorists lying in wait to attack. Planes falling from the sky. Ships
blowing up. The candidates in the race for president are painting some
scary scenarios to motivate voters.
In the first presidential campaign in
a new age of terrorist threats, President Bush and Sen. John Kerry are
speaking to the public's worst collective nightmares, making the case
that the next occupant of the White House will make the difference in
whether the country is safe or at greater risk.
Kerry's new vision of doomsday is
based on reports that the Bush administration failed to secure nearly
400 tons of explosives missing from a military installation in Iraq.
He accuses the Bush campaign of playing on people's fears while saying
he speaks to their hopes, but in the same speech he'll raise the
dangers of the missing explosives.
"Folks, these are the kind of
explosives that took down Pan Am 103," Kerry said this week in Las
Vegas, a reference to the 1988 plane bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland.
"These are the kind of explosives that blew up the USS Cole. And there
are enough explosives there to harm America."
Bush says his opponent doesn't know
what he's talking about on the missing weapons cache, then paints his
own frightening picture of a world with Kerry as the U.S. president.
"I want to remind the American people
if Senator Kerry had his way, we would still be taking our global
test, Saddam Hussein would still be in power, he would control all
those weapons and explosives, and could have shared them with our
terrorist enemies," Bush said Wednesday.
The central theme of Bush's
re-election campaign long has been to make it seem dangerous to elect
Kerry. But he's sharpened his attacks since a speech Oct. 18 in which
he accused Kerry of having a dangerous mind-set that would permit a
response to terrorism "only after America is hit."
Bush touts himself as a steady leader
and better protector while reminding audiences of the horror of the
terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, that killed nearly 3,000 people
in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.
"The terrorists who killed thousands
are still dangerous and they are determined to strike again," Bush
said Wednesday in Lititz, Pa. "And the outcome of this election will
set the direction of the war against the terrorists. ... If America
shows uncertainty or weakness in this decade, the world will drift
toward tragedy."
Kerry says his combat experience
during the Vietnam War shows he is not the weakling Bush portrays him
to be. Kerry said he will fight the terrorists "with all of the
intensity with which I went at it, and I went at it, and the guys who
were on my boats will tell you how we went at it. We fought."
Not all the warnings are about death
and destruction, but they are still meant to frighten.
Bush says Kerry's proposals cost so
much that he would have to raise taxes on the middle class. Kerry says
Bush could reinstate the military draft and plans to privatize Social
Security.
Bush has said he would not do either,
although he does favor allowing younger workers to invest some of
their payroll taxes in personal retirement accounts. Kerry recently
pledged not to raise taxes on people earning $200,000 or less.
Perhaps the scariest visions have
come from Vice President Dick Cheney who, while campaigning,
frequently raises the possibility of terrorists unleashing weapons of
mass destruction in urban areas.
"The biggest threat we face now as a
nation is the possibility of terrorists ending up in the middle of one
of our cities with deadlier weapons than have ever been used against
us, with a biological agent, or a nuclear weapon, or a chemical weapon
of some kind, able to threaten the lives of hundreds of thousands of
Americans, not just 3,000," he said in Carroll, Ohio, last week.
Cheney has said he suspects
terrorists will try to disrupt Tuesday's election. He also has said
that if Kerry were in charge the Soviet Union might still exist and
Saddam might not just control Iraq, but the entire Persian Gulf.
Cheney's wife also stoked fear
Wednesday when she introduced the vice president in Washington, Pa.
"The terrorists will try to come
after us again," Lynne Cheney said. "They'll try. You know it. And I
ask, 'Who do I want to have standing in the doorway ... protecting
us?' It is not John Kerry." --
Associated Press
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