Dean Calls Iraqi PM an 'Anti-Semite'
By BRIAN SKOLOFF
07/26/06 - -- WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- Democratic Party chairman
Howard Dean on Wednesday called Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
an "anti-Semite" for failing to denounce Hezbollah for its attacks
against Israel.
Al-Maliki has condemned Israel's offensive, prompting several
Democrats to boycott his address to a joint meeting of Congress and
others to criticize him. Dean's comments were the strongest to date.
"The Iraqi prime minister is an anti-Semite," the Democratic leader
told a gathering of business leaders in Florida. "We don't need to
spend $200 and $300 and $500 billion bringing democracy to Iraq to
turn it over to people who believe that Israel doesn't have a right
to defend itself and who refuse to condemn Hezbollah."
On Tuesday, leading Senate Democrats said in a sharply worded letter
that Al-Maliki's "failure to condemn Hezbollah's aggression and
recognize Israel's right to defend itself raises serious questions
about whether Iraq under your leadership can play a constructive
role in resolving the current crisis and bringing stability to the
Middle East."
The Republican National Committee rejected Dean's criticism of Al-Maliki,
saying, "It is incredibly troubling that Howard Dean would seek to
score cheap political points by attacking the democratically elected
prime minister of Iraq."
On Capitol Hill, Sen. John Warner, R-Va., the chairman of the Armed
Services Committee, said: "I dismiss Howard Dean. Really, he's a
disappointment, even to Democrats. I don't care to deal with that."
Dean also used the Florida appearance to criticize President Bush,
calling him "the most divisive president probably in our history" as
he complained that Republican policies of deceit and finger-pointing
are tearing the country apart.
"He's always talking about those people. It's always somebody else's
fault. It's the gays' fault. It's the immigrants' fault. It's the
liberals' fault. It's the Democrats' fault. It's Hollywood people,"
Dean said. "Americans are sick of that. Even if you win elections
doing that, you drag down our country."
Dean spoke to about 240 business leaders in Palm Beach County at a
gathering of the Democratic Professionals Forum. It is part of a
nationwide grassroots campaign to get voters involved in politics on
a local level ahead of the November elections.
Republicans welcomed Dean's appearance in Florida, criticizing him
for the same divisiveness he accused Republicans of creating.
"Howard Dean's divisive rhetoric has done nothing more than drive
the Democrat Party further to the extreme left of the political
spectrum," said Carole Jean Jordan, head of the Republican Party of
Florida.
Associated Press Writer Anne Plummer Flaherty in Washington
contributed to this report.