A PAST association with a former terrorist has returned to haunt Barack Obama
as the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination nears its end game.
Republicans are turning on Obama for his connection with William Ayers, once a
member of the Weather Underground, a terrorist group that bombed the
Capitol, the Pentagon and the State Department in the 1970s.
Ayers was loosely involved in Obama’s election as an Illinois state senator in
the late 1990s, when he was introduced to local activists at a meeting in
his house. He also donated $200 to Obama’s reelection campaign in 2001.
Obama served with Ayers on the board of the Woods Fund, a philanthropic
foundation, for three years and shared a platform with him at two academic
conferences.
Republicans believe they have found new evidence that Obama lacks judgment and
patriotism just as the controversy over the Rev Jeremiah Wright, his pastor,
who said, “God damn America”, is dying down.
The Weathermen, a small band of extreme leftists who got their name from lines
in a Bob Dylan song - “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the
wind blows” - conducted a bombing campaign against targets such as police
headquarters, prisons and courthouses for three years to “bring the
[Viet-nam] war home”.
Two police officers were killed in 1981, when members of the Weathermen and
Black Liberation Army stole $1m from an armoured car. It was their last
action.
Ayers, 63, turned himself in to police that year, when charges against him
were dropped because of mishandled FBI surveillance. He is now a professor
of education at the University of Illinois in Chicago and is admired in
progressive political and educational circles.
He wisely remained silent as stories about his connection with the 46-year-old
presidential candidate began to circulate - until he was goaded into the
open last week by repeated taunts from Sean Hannity, the conservative Fox
News television host, who described him as an “unrepentant terrorist”.
Newt Gingrich, the former Republican Speaker of the House, joined in the
controversy on Hannity’s show. “It’s part of a general pattern in which
Senator Obama is very comfortable with the hard left and the people who are
in many ways fundamentally antiAmerican and certainly
anti-American-government,” he said.
Karl Rove, President George W Bush’s former election guru, said the connection
with Ayers was troubling. “There’s been talk in the past about friendship,”
he said. “They made speeches together. He was a supporter of him in his race
for the state senate. It would be interesting to know how close the links
are.”
John McCain, the Republican presidential candidate, was asked what he thought
about Ayers and declined to offer an opinion. It was Hannity’s questioning
of McCain, though, that provoked Ayers to respond.
In a lecture to college students in North Dakota last week, Ayers said: “I was
trying to go to sleep, flipping through the channels real quick, and Hannity
said, ‘Stay tuned. John McCain and I will talk about William Ayers.’ And I
said, damn, I will have to stay tuned for an hour.”
Ayers went on to tell the students: “People ask, ‘Do you regret anything you
did against the government in those days?’ And my answer is: no, I don’t.”
In an interview in The New York Times on the day of the September 11 attacks,
when he was promoting Fugitive Days, his book on the Weathermen, Ayers said:
“I don’t regret setting bombs,” and added: “I feel we didn’t do enough.”
He defended the comments on his blog www.billayers.org last week by claiming:
“I’m sometimes asked if I regret anything I did to oppose the war in Vietnam
and I say: no, I don’t regret anything I did to stop the slaughter of
millions of human beings by my own government.
“Sometimes I add: I don’t think I did enough. This is then elided: he has no
regrets for setting bombs and thinks there should be more bombings.”
The Obama campaign believes a very slender connection with Ayers is being used
to smear their candidate.
Ben LaBolt, a campaign spokesman, said: “Senator Obama strongly condemns the
violent actions of the Weathermen group, as he does all acts of criminal
violence. But he was an eight-year-old child when the Weathermen were
active, and any attempt to connect him with events of almost 40 years ago is
patently ridiculous.”
Sam Ackerman, a Chicago political activist and neighbour of Ayers, said: “The
whole thing is preposterous. I held the first fundraiser for Obama, when he
ran for the state senate, in my house. A lot of people held little coffee
meetings. It wasn’t a big deal.”
He added: “In the past 20 years Bill Ayers has become a nationally renowned
educator and is a highly respected professor at the University of Illinois.
I think Barack Obama should tell people, ‘I’m not in the renouncing
business’.”
The controversy comes at a sensitive time for Obama. Joe Klein, writing in
Time magazine, described patriotism as “sadly, a crucial challenge for Obama
now” and advised him to be “corny” about America.
Obama has just finished a four-day swing through Indiana, a
conservative-leaning state, which will hold its primary on May 6. Prayers
and the pledge of allegiance were said. As the son of a Kenyan father and a
mother from Kansas, Obama has emphasised: “I owe what I can to this country,
this country that I love, and I will never forget it.”
Larry Johnson, a former counterterrorism official at the CIA said: “They’re
going to kill him with this. The guy is an unrepentant terrorist, so please,
Barack Obama, explain why you aligned yourself with him. It is a fundamental
question of judgment. By the time he [Obama] was hanging around with Ayers,
his position was well known. He [Ayers] was not a freedom fighter; he
belonged to a violent terrorist group.”
David Axelrod, Obama’s chief strategist, said earlier this year that the two
were “friendly” but in the sense that “their kids attend the same school”,
but Ayers' children left long ago. A campaign aide later clarified that the
connection was with Bernadine Dohrn, Ayers’s wife, who was still involved
with the school.
Dohrn is another former leader of the Weather Underground, who also went on
the run in the 1970s and served just under a year in jail.
Video: Documentary
on the Weather Underground