Political                    Career                    Elected to the Senate in 1998; not running for re-election                    Education                      North Carolina State University, B.S., 1974; University of                      North Carolina, J.D., 1977                    Military Service                      None                    Profession                      Lawyer                    Foreign Policy                      Advisers                      Exclusive advisers: Ronald Asmus, Derek Chollet; also consults                      with Sandy Berger, Kurt Campbell, Ashton Carter, Kenneth Pollack,                      Dennis Ross, Hugh Shelton                     Campaign Website                      www.johnedwards2004.com                                                             |                                       John Edwards was a cosponsor of the resolution that gave                      President George W. Bush the authority to use force in Iraq.                      He continues to defend his vote, but is highly critical of                      what he views as the Bush administration’s sole focus                      on pre-emptive military force rather than multilateral solutions                      to stop the spread of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.                      
                       “This administration’s approach to protecting America                      from weapons of mass destruction [WMD] can be summed up simply,”                      Edwards charged Dec. 15 in a speech entitled “Prevention,                      Non Pre-emption.” “Wait until our enemies gather                      strength, and then use force to stop them.” 
                       The first-term senator from North Carolina unveiled a number                      of policy initiatives that he would undertake, if elected                      president, to fight WMD proliferation. “Rather than run                      from internaitonal efforts to halt the spread of dangerous                      weapons, I will lead in modernizing and strengthening those                      efforts, beginning with one of the most important—the                      nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT)….Right now it is                      too easy for a country to cheat or use a legal civilian power                      program as the jumping off point for an illegal military one                      by withdrawing from the treaty on short notice and having                      weapons capabilities within months.” 
                       Within six months of taking office, Edwards said he would                      convene a summit of leading nations to develop a multilateral                      global nuclear compact. Once established, he asserts, the                      compact would “close the loophole that allows civilian                      nuclear programs to go military.” The global effort would,                      in part, increase security of nuclear materials, give international                      experts the authority to inspect nuclear facilities without                      notice, and make clear that any country that joins the NPT                      and then opts out—or violates the rules of the compact—will                      be penalized. 
                       Edwards said he will develop new tools to deal with proliferation                      threats such as North Korea and Iran. “I will work through                      the UN Security Council and other mechanisms to establish                      the principle in international law that countries that sponsor                      terrorism or willfully violate nonproliferation treaties like                      the NPT should be treated like the criminals they are.”                      He accused the Bush administration of not having a “coherent                      strategy” for North Korea and said that, as president,                      he would work with U.S. allies such as South Korea and Japan                      to develop a “serious plan for ending [North Korea’s]                      destabilizing weapons programs and exports—a plan that                      includes carrots and sticks.”
                       Edwards also wants to revive the oft-discussed idea of appointing                      a nonproliferation czar to consolidate the federal government’s                      nonproliferation efforts. “As president I will make sure                      that we have someone who wakes up every morning thinking about                      how to keep WMD out of the hands of terrorists and others                      who wish us harm.” He would also support “other                      measures that this administration has rejected, including                      the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and efforts to strengthen                      the Biological Weapons Convention.” 
                       The North Carolina senator proposes tripling the approximately                      $1 billion being spent annually on comprehensive threat reduction                      (CTR) programs to safeguard and destroy Russia’s Cold                      War WMD legacy. “Instead of living with this danger for                      the next three decades or more, I will eliminate it before                      another decade has passed by simply making it a priority.”
                       Edwards also wants to expand CTR programs beyond the former                      Soviet Union to places such as India and Pakistan. To help                      fund that effort, Edwards said he would cancel plans recently                      approved by Congress at the request of the Bush administration                      to research a new generation of nuclear weapons and reduce                      the more than $9 billion spent each year on missile defense.
                       “While we need to maintain deterrence and keep a strong                      defense, it doesn’t make sense to spend nine times as                      much on one program that might work some day than we spend                      on all the other programs that do work today to protect our                      citizens from weapons of mass destruction,” Edwards argued.                      
                       He also opined that the United States should not deploy any                      missile defense system until it has been rigorously tested                      and officials are confident it will work. In his view, the                      missile defense system “so far has succeeded in shooting                      down only one thing: the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.”                     |