Maverick Mike Gravel.

AuthorLauria, Joe
PositionEssay

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Former Alaska Senator Mike Gravel is running for President in the Democratic primaries. At seventy-six, he has been out of politics for two and a half decades. Now he wants back in. And he's making his strong opposition to the Iraq War the centerpiece of his longshot effort to win the nomination.

Gravel's outspoken performance at the first Democratic Presidential debate in South Carolina on April 26 brought him some instant attention.

Gravel said from the podium that the Democrat frontrunners "frightened" him with their refusal to rule out the use of even nuclear weapons against Iran. "Tell me, Barack, who do you want to nuke?" Gravel asked Senator Obama.

By the next morning, "the Internet was abuzz with Gravelmania--blogs were burbling and clips showing his debate highlights were circulating online," reports the New York Daily News .

Gravel was merely echoing a position he's been stating for months, only this time the media could not ignore him. He told the Democratic National Committee winter meeting in February that because of the "extreme importance of any decision to go to war," anybody who voted for it "is not qualified to hold the office of President."

Though the Democrats controlled the Senate at the time of the vote, "the fear of opposing a popular warrior President on the eve of a midterm election prevailed," he said. "Political calculations trumped morality, and the Middle East was set ablaze. The Democrats lost in the [2002] election anyway, but the American people lost even more."

Gravel says implicit in Congress's power to declare war is the power to end it, so he wants Congress to pass a law declaring the Iraq War over and shame a filibustering Republican minority into submission.

"It goes to Bush. He has two choices: End the war or veto it. Obviously he'll veto it because the good God told him to invade and keep it going, so God trumps the Congress," Gravel says.

Gravel thinks Bush should be criminally indicted. "He lied to the American people and it has cost us more than 3,000 people," he says. "They have manipulated the powers of government and thousands of people have perished. Until you do that, our leaders will never be disciplined. They will feel like they can get away with anything."

F or Gravel, opposing a foolish war is nothing unusual. He cosponsored a resolution in the Senate to cut off funding of the Vietnam War. And on June 29, 1971, even as he was hooked up with a colostomy bag and was...

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