Activists note that most of the candidates for top security
posts voted for the 2002 resolution authorizing President Bush
to invade Iraq or otherwise supported launching the war.
Reporting from Washington -- Antiwar groups and other liberal
activists are increasingly concerned at signs that Barack Obama's
national security team will be dominated by appointees who favored
the Iraq invasion and hold hawkish views on other important
foreign policy issues.
The activists are uneasy not only about signs that both Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) and Defense Secretary Robert
M. Gates could be in the Obama Cabinet, but at reports suggesting
that several other short-list candidates for top security posts
backed the decision to go to war.
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"Obama ran his campaign around the idea the war was not
legitimate, but it sends a very different message when you bring
in people who supported the war from the beginning," said
Kelly Dougherty, executive director of the 54-chapter Iraq Veterans
Against the War.
The activists -- key members of the coalition that propelled
Obama to the White House -- fear he is drifting from the antiwar
moorings of his once-longshot presidential candidacy. Obama
has eased the rigid timetable he had set for withdrawing troops
from Iraq, and he appears to be leaning toward the center in
his candidates to fill key national security posts.
The president-elect has told some Democrats that he expects
to take heat from parts of his political base but will not be
deterred by it.
Aside from Clinton and Gates, the roster of possible Cabinet
secretaries has included Sens. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) and Richard
G. Lugar (R-Ind.), who both voted in 2002 for the resolution
authorizing President Bush to invade Iraq, though Lugar has
since said he regretted it.
"It's astonishing that not one of the 23 senators or 133
House members who voted against the war is in the mix,"
said Sam Husseini of the liberal group Institute for Public
Accuracy.
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