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February
2, 2004
Simmons'
Military Knowledge Makes Him a Target
By
Kelley Beaucar Vlahos

WASHINGTON — As a Vietnam veteran who served 37 years in
the Army reserves, Rep. Rob Simmons (search)
says he knows enough about the military to argue with some
certainty that political wrangling at home does nothing
for troop morale on the battlefield.
“I am very sensitive to the fact that our men and women
don’t need Congress quibbling over our involvement in
what is a difficult and dangerous task,” the Connecticut
Republican told Foxnews.com. “There is nothing more
demoralizing to our soldiers in the field.”
Since the
Sept. 11, 2001
, terror attacks, the two-term lawmaker has been called
upon for his expertise in military intelligence. He said
he has no taste for charges that the Bush administration,
eager to wage war in
Iraq
, ignored faulty intelligence or spun it to its benefit.
“I’ve met with Dr. Kay in
Baghdad
and I've had substantial conversations with him. I find
him a competent and fair individual,” said Simmons, of
the former chief weapons inspector, David Kay, who
testified last week in the Senate Armed Services Committee
that faulty intelligence led to inaccurate information
about the level of weapons of mass destruction (search)
held by Saddam Hussein’s regime.
Kay said that while Saddam was in violation of United
Nations' resolutions and posed a very real threat, it is
unlikely inspectors will find the large stockpiles of
weapons reported to exist by intelligence sources before
Operation Iraqi Freedom.
“He hasn’t observed any distortion of the
intelligence. I don’t see a distortion of the
intelligence. What I see is a weakness of the intelligence
process,” Simmons said of Kay's conclusions.
Simmons knows the intelligence process well. After serving
19 months and earning two Bronze Stars in the Vietnam War,
he joined the Central Intelligence Agency in 1969 and
worked as an operations officer for 10 years. Following
that, he served as staff director for the Senate
Intelligence Committee, earned a master's degree from
Harvard and taught military intelligence at Yale’s
Berkeley
College
.
He got into politics as a five-term state legislator
representing the towns of
Stonington
and
North Stonington
in a Democratic-leaning district. In 2000, he beat
Democratic U.S. Rep. Sam Gejdenson 51 percent to 49
percent for the 2nd District seat. He fought equally hard
getting re-elected in 2002, and given the
Democratic-leaning nature of his district, Simmons
doesn’t expect anything different in 2004.
“I represent a wonderful district,” Simmons said.
“But no matter how hard I work, or how much I do or how
many people know my record … I will always have a hard
race and I will always plan for that.”
Democrats are already lining up to make sure of it. Shaun
McNally, a former state legislator from
Norwich
, and Jim Sullivan, financial advisor and former
Norwich
councilman, have filed to run in the Sept. 19 primary.
Both men think Simmons is out of step with the district,
which is about 30 percent Democrat, 24 percent Republican
and 46 percent unaffiliated.
“It’s a district where the independent view
matters,” said McNally, who recently quit his job as
public affairs director for the Connecticut Business and
Industry Association (search)
to run for office.
In 2000, the 2nd Congressional District voted for Democrat
Al Gore over George W. Bush 54 percent to 40 percent and
gave Ralph Nader 6 percent. It also voted heavily for
independent Ross Perot in the 1992 elections.
McNally said the biggest issue facing the district —
which encompasses 65 towns in eastern Connecticut as well
as the Electric Boat submarine shipyard, the Coast Guard
Academy and the massive Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun tribal
casino resorts — is finding well-paying jobs.
“I see jobs moving away, not only manufacturing jobs,
but white collar jobs," McNally said. "Take that
and then lay over it enormous budget deficits and crushing
national debt, unfair trade deficits … Rob Simmons,
through his voting record, is no longer one of us. He’s
become one of them.”
Greg Speed, spokesman for the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee, took it a step further, calling
Simmons, a “rubber stamp for [House Majority Leader] Tom
DeLay and the special interests running
Washington
."
Speed said Simmons "is certainly vulnerable,"
but the Main Street Partnership (search),
a coalition of moderate GOP House members, has announced
that it will fight for Simmons' re-election.
“He’s very independent, far from a DeLay
conservative,” said Main Street Executive Director
Sarah Chamberlain Resnick
, who called Simmons one of the most moderate,
independent-minded Republicans in Congress.
Resnick pointed to a number of non-defense issues where
Simmons broke away from the GOP pack. He voted against
drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve (search)
in
Alaska
, against the partial-birth abortion ban and for campaign
finance reform.
For Simmons, his pet issue of veterans' health care has
brought him esteem from colleagues on the Armed Services
Committee and the Veterans' Affairs Committee, on which he
chairs the Health Subcommittee. He has also fought hard to
keep in operation the Naval Submarine Base in
New London
, which has been on and off the federal chopping block for
years.
“He’s a bright, perceptive guy,” Rep. Roscoe
Bartlett, R-Md., who serves with Simmons on the Armed
Services Committee, told Foxnews.com. “We don’t want
to lose Rob. I’m there if he needs me to campaign for
him.”
Republican Rep. Nancy Johnson of
Connecticut
concurred.
“In a short period of time, Rob has risen to become a
very effective congressman for his district and for
Connecticut
,” she said, praising his work on military issues.
But Sullivan, who appears at this point to be the
Democratic Party favorite for the nomination, said there
is a disconnect with the constituency, and his job is to
put Simmons' record to the test.
"I will be the underdog every step of the way,"
Sullivan said. "It is important for me, however, to
educate people on the issues that confront the district
and the country, to have a debate worthy of the people of
the district and to give them a choice." |
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