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Edwards vows support for peace process

February 16, 2011

By Staff Reporter

The North Carolina senator, who is challenging Sen. John Kerry for the Democratic presidential nomination, said in his statement that Ireland was one of America’s most critical allies in Europe.
As the current president of the European Union, Edwards said that Ireland had a historic opportunity to help set the direction for Europe for years to come.
“I will work hard to support a strong U.S.-Ireland relationship, and look forward to making an official visit to Ireland,” Edwards said in the statement released by his campaign headquarters. “I am a strong supporter of the Northern Ireland peace process, and believe that the U.S. has a vital role to play.”
He pointed to “historic strides” by the Clinton administration in helping the peace process move forward, an effort that had culminated with the peace talks “so ably” chaired by former Sen. George Mitchell and the Good Friday agreement of 1998.
“The Good Friday Agreement provides the framework for the way forward for all the people of Northern Ireland and I support its full implementation,” Edwards said in his statement.
He added that he regretted that the agreement had stalled.
“Trust has broken down. With negotiations between the two sides under way, including the participation of Tony Blair, I am hopeful that the parties are on a path to get the process moving again,” the senator said. “I encourage all the parties to take the necessary steps for peace, which must include the end of paramilitary violence, demilitarization, and the enactment of justice and equality laws that serve all the people of Northern Ireland.
“For the United States, I believe we need to continue to be an honest broker and to support the parties and the two governments bridge their differences.”
Edwards was the last of the more prominent Democratic contenders to issue a statement on Ireland.
Kerry, who is leading in opinion polls in most of the Super Tuesday primary states, issued an initial statement last November and followed with a second, more expanded version, a couple of weeks ago.
The Kerry statement was longer and more pointed than his chief Democratic rival’s and took particular aim at President Bush’s handling of the peace process, which, according to Kerry, did not match up well with President Clinton’s record.

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