The Delaware Gazette

Romney assails Obama after US ambassador’s death

Flags wave as Repub­li­can pres­i­den­tial can­di­date, for­mer Mass­a­chu­setts Gov. Mitt Rom­ney speaks at Pueblo Weis­brod Air­craft Museum in Pueblo, Colo., Mon­day. (AP Photo/Bryan Oller)

DAVID ESPO, KASIE HUNT

Asso­ci­ated Press

PUEBLO, Colo. — Mitt Rom­ney led a cho­rus of Repub­li­can crit­i­cism of the administration’s for­eign pol­icy on Mon­day, accus­ing Pres­i­dent Barack Obama of min­i­miz­ing the recent killing of the U.S. ambas­sador to Libya as a mere “bump in the road” rather than part of a chain of events that threat­ens Amer­i­can interests.

White House press sec­re­tary Jay Car­ney called the accu­sa­tions “des­per­ate and offen­sive” as Rom­ney and his allies sought to gain polit­i­cal advan­tage in the lat­ter stages of a polit­i­cal cam­paign that seems to be trend­ing Obama’s way.

The pres­i­dent did not com­ment on the crit­i­cism when he and first lady Michelle Obama taped an appear­ance on ABC’s “The View” that blended the per­sonal with the polit­i­cal. Asked if a Rom­ney pres­i­dency would be a dis­as­ter, Obama said the nation can “sur­vive a lot.” He added: “The Amer­i­can peo­ple don’t want to just sur­vive, we want to thrive.”

The back and forth on for­eign pol­icy occurred as Rom­ney said he was shift­ing to a more ener­getic sched­ule of pub­lic cam­paign events, bid­ding to reverse recent ero­sion in bat­tle­ground state polls. After days spent largely rais­ing cam­paign cash — and try­ing to min­i­mize the fall­out from one speech to donors last spring — he pledged to make the case for “real and pos­i­tive change.”

While national polls make the race exceed­ingly close, Obama has gained ground on Rom­ney in many recent sur­veys when poten­tial vot­ers are asked to com­pare the two rivals in their abil­ity to fix the econ­omy. Slug­gish growth and national unem­ploy­ment of 8.1 per­cent make the econ­omy by far the dom­i­nant issue in the race, and the two men have focused much of their time and adver­tis­ing bud­gets on high­light­ing their dif­fer­ences on taxes, spend­ing and plans for job creation.

The same polls show Obama with a healthy lead over Rom­ney when vot­ers are asked which can­di­date is bet­ter equipped to han­dle for­eign pol­icy, and the pres­i­dent has not shied away from trum­pet­ing his deci­sion to order the secret mis­sion by U.S. forces that killed ter­ror­ism mas­ter­mind Osama bin Laden in his Pak­istani hide­out more than a year ago.

At the same time, Romney’s advis­ers say vot­ers are more inclined to ques­tion Obama’s han­dling of for­eign pol­icy after the attack on the U.S. Con­sulate in Beng­hazi, Libya, ear­lier this month resulted in the death of the U.S. ambas­sador and three other Americans.

Not only Rom­ney, but other Repub­li­cans, as well, chal­lenged Obama on for­eign pol­icy on Monday.

In a con­fer­ence call with reporters, Rep. Eric Can­tor, R-Va., the House major­ity leader, said: “Israel con­tin­ues to find itself on the receiv­ing end of harsh lan­guage by the pres­i­dent of the White House. … There is a some­what con­tin­ued pat­tern of throw­ing Israel under the bus when Israel stands as our clos­est ally.”

And the National Repub­li­can Sen­a­to­r­ial Com­mit­tee issued chal­lenges to Demo­c­ra­tic can­di­dates in sev­eral races to “share their view” on Obama’s remarks in an inter­view with CBS’ “60 Min­utes” over the weekend.

In the inter­view itself, Obama was respond­ing when asked if recent events in the Mid­dle East gave him pause for sup­port­ing gov­ern­ments that came to power fol­low­ing a wave of regime changes known as the Arab Spring.

He said he has long noted that events were going to be rocky, adding that the ques­tion itself “pre­sumes that some­how we could have stopped this wave of change.”

“I think it was absolutely the right thing for us to align our­selves with democ­racy, uni­ver­sal rights. … But I was pretty cer­tain and con­tinue to be pretty cer­tain that there are going to be bumps in the road because — you know, in a lot of these places — the one orga­niz­ing prin­ci­ple has been Islam.”

He added: “There are strains of extrem­ism, and anti-Americans, and anti-Western sen­ti­ments and you know can be tapped into by demagogues.”

Rom­ney was eager to talk about the topic, squeez­ing inter­views with three tele­vi­sion net­works into his sched­ule and touch­ing on the sub­ject at the begin­ning of a rally in Pueblo, Colo.

“I can’t imag­ine say­ing some­thing like the assas­si­na­tion of ambas­sadors is a bump in the road, when you look at the entire con­text, the assas­si­na­tion, the Mus­lim Broth­er­hood pres­i­dent being elected in Egypt, 20,000 peo­ple killed in Syria, Iran close to becom­ing a nuclear nation, that these are far from being bumps in the road,” he told ABC.

“They rep­re­sent events that are spin­ning out of the kind of influ­ence we’d like to have. We’re at the mercy of events rather than shap­ing the events in the Mid­dle East.”

U.S. offi­cials are inves­ti­gat­ing the deaths in Libya, which occurred when the con­sulate was breached.

In his appear­ance on “The View,” the pres­i­dent avoided a direct answer when asked if the attack had been terrorism.

“There’s no doubt that the kind of weapons that were used, the ongo­ing assault, that it wasn’t just a mob action. What’s clear is that, around the world, there are still a lot of threats out there,” he said.

Rom­ney intends to return to the sub­ject of inter­na­tional affairs and dis­cuss for­eign aid, trade agree­ments and inter­na­tional devel­op­ment when he addresses the Clin­ton Global Ini­tia­tive in New York on Tues­day, accord­ing to a per­son famil­iar with the campaign’s thinking.

Rom­ney, like Can­tor, took a slap Mon­day at Obama’s han­dling of rela­tions with Israel.

“The pres­i­dent doesn’t have time to actu­ally spend time with lead­ers of these nations, par­tic­u­larly Bibi Netanyahu. I find that very trou­bling,” he said.

In a cam­paign set­ting records for tele­vi­sion adver­tis­ing, both cam­paigns released new com­mer­cials dur­ing the day as Obama con­ceded some of his own had gone too far. “You know, do we see some­times us going over­board in our cam­paign, the mis­takes that are made in areas where there is no doubt that some­body could dis­pute how we are pre­sent­ing things — that hap­pens in pol­i­tics,” he said dur­ing the “60 Min­utes” tap­ing. The remark was not part of the broad­cast, but was posted to the CBS website.

AP News Posted by on Sep 24 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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