By John Whitesides, Political Correspondent WASHINGTON, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Six Democratic presidential hopefuls courted party leaders on Friday with calls to end the Iraq war but offered divergent views on how to do it, saying the debate would be a crucial test of Democratic leadership. In brief speeches to nearly 400 members of the Democratic National Committee and hundreds of other activists who jammed a hotel ballroom, the 2008 White House contenders said Democrats in Congress must find a way to pressure President George W. Bush to stop the war. Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, who has been criticized for her 2002 vote authorizing the war and for being slow to turn against the conflict, promised to bring U.S. troops home if she is elected to the White House. "If we in Congress don't end this war before January 2009, as president I will," she said, speaking loudly at times to be heard over a small band of anti-war hecklers, and saying "I understand the frustration and outrage." "If I had been president in October of 2002, I would not have started this war," she said. Clinton, of New York, said a looming vote in Congress on a nonbinding resolution against Bush's plan to send more troops to Iraq "would be the first time we have said no to Bush." But several other candidates said U.S. voters who put Democrats in control of Congress in November's election expected more. "I am disappointed we can't find a way to do more than send a meaningless message to the White House," said Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut. "I don't believe spending a week debating a nonbinding resolution is the change that America voted for." STOP TROOP BUILD-UP John Edwards, a former North Carolina senator who also voted in 2002 to authorize the war but now says his vote was wrong, said Democrats had to stop the troop build-up. "They're counting on us to be weak, to be political and to be careful," he said of the Bush administration. "This is not the time for political calculation. This is the time for political courage. It is the time to stand up." Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio and retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark, who has not declared yet whether he will run for the White House, also spoke to the meeting and condemned the war. Four more Democratic presidential hopefuls -- Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack and former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel -- will speak on Saturday. The appearances could be crucial for candidates in launching the hunt for party donors and endorsements, with most planning to greet as many of the DNC members as they can. Four years ago, Howard Dean used the meeting to ignite his maverick and ultimately losing presidential campaign with a fiery speech condemning fellow Democrats for being timid in confronting Bush and opposing the war. Dean, who is now chairman of the DNC and presided over the meeting, recalled the moment. "We've come a long way," he said. Obama, who has quickly moved into position to challenge early front-runner Clinton, eschewed easy applause lines for a sober speech calling for an end to political cynicism. He said American voters should be inspired by the campaign, not turned off. "We don't want another election where voters are simply holding their noses and feel like they're choosing the lesser of two evils," he said. An early opponent of the war who advocates a phased withdrawal beginning in May, Obama said each candidate should spell out a detailed plan for how they would end the war. "It was enough to run against George Bush during this past congressional election; it will not be enough now. The American people are expecting more. They want to know what we are going to do," he said.