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Democrats Focus on Iraq In Contentious Second Debate

Former senator Mike Gravel (Alaska) accused Democrats of complicity in Iraq. "Sure, it's George Bush's war. But it's the Democrats' war also," he said.

Both Clinton and Edwards faced questions about the fact that they did not read the National Intelligence Estimate preceding the 2002 vote authorizing the invasion. Clinton said she had been "thoroughly briefed" at the time and "sought dissenting opinions" on her own.

VIDEO | Post-Debate Wrapup

Edwards, likewise, said he had all "the information I needed" to make a decision. But then he again pressed Clinton for refusing to call her vote a mistake. " I think it is important for anybody who seeks to be the next president of the United States, given the dishonesty that we've been faced with over the last several years, to be honest to the country," he said.

Clinton -- who according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll holds a solid lead over her Democratic rivals nationally but trails in some statewide surveys in early primary states -- referred to her husband's administration several times during her answers and fielded questions about him as well.

Asked whether his administration's "don't ask, don't tell" policy for gays in the military was a mistake, Clinton described it as a necessary political compromise at the time but an inadequate policy today. "It was a transition policy," Clinton said, adding she believes that the policy could be changed to allow gays to serve openly in the military.

In another exchange over military policy, Clinton differed with Edwards over the term "global war on terror," which Edwards has dismissed as a politically charged bumper-sticker slogan. "That's all it is, all it's ever been -- was intended to do was for George Bush to use it to justify everything he does: the ongoing war in Iraq, Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, spying on Americans, torture," Edwards said. "None of those things are okay. They are not the United States of America."

Asked if she agreed with Edwards, Clinton responded, "No, I do not."

"I am a senator from New York," she said. "I have lived with the aftermath of 9/11, and I have seen firsthand the terrible damage that can be inflicted on our country by a small band of terrorists who are intent upon foisting their way of life and using suicide bombers and suicidal people to carry out their agenda."

On health care, the discussion opened with a question about the cost of providing universal coverage. It quickly expanded to a debate about how to achieve that goal.

Edwards said his plan would cost $90 billion to $120 billion a year, and he pledged to roll back Bush's tax cuts for Americans earning more than $200,000 a year. "I believe you cannot cover everybody in America, create a more efficient health care system, cover the cracks, you know, getting rid of things like pre-existing conditions and making sure that mental health is treated the same as physical health; I don't think you can do all those things for nothing."

Obama, responding to criticism from Edwards that his plan would not provide universal coverage, said he prefers to make insurance more affordable to average Americans rather than make it mandatory. "My belief is that most families want health care but they can't afford it," he said.

Clinton said she is "thrilled" that Democrats have again embraced the goal of universal coverage, after she and her husband could not get their health-care bill through Congress in 1994. She said what is most needed is political support to weather attacks of the kind that killed their plan.

"You've got to have the political will -- a broad coalition of business and labor, doctors, nurses, hospitals -- everybody standing firm when the inevitable attacks come from the insurance companies and the pharmaceutical companies that don't want to change the system because they make so much money out of it," she said.

At one point, the candidates were asked whether they favor making English the official language of the country. All but Gravel opposed the idea, but Obama used the query to make a broader point, saying such questions are designed to divide the country. "When we get distracted by those kinds of questions," he said, "I think we do a disservice to the American people."

The two-hour session was held on the campus of Saint Anselm College just outside Manchester and was co-sponsored by CNN, WMUR-TV and the Manchester Union Leader. Republicans will debate here on Tuesday night. CNN's Wolf Blitzer moderated the debate, with WMUR political director Scott Spradling and the Union Leader's state capitol bureau chief, Tom Fahey, helping question the candidates.

The second hour of the debate featured questions from New Hampshire voters.


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