The Delaware Gazette

Romney presses foreign policy criticism anew

Repub­li­can pres­i­den­tial can­di­date and for­mer Mass­a­chu­setts Gov. Mitt Rom­ney leaves his cam­paign head­quar­ters in Boston Sun­day. (Asso­ci­ated Press | Charles Dharapak)


KASIE HUNT

Asso­ci­ated Press

BURLINGTON, Mass. — Amid vio­lent flare ups in the Mid­dle East, Repub­li­can pres­i­den­tial can­di­date Mitt Rom­ney is try­ing to prove his own readi­ness to be com­man­der in chief and force Pres­i­dent Barack Obama to answer for tur­moil in places like Libya, where ter­ror­ists killed the U.S. ambas­sador on the anniver­sary of 9/11.

Rom­ney advis­ers argue that the stepped-up for­eign pol­icy crit­i­cism dove­tails with a key piece of his cen­tral argu­ment: Obama is in over his head, and the coun­try will be worse off if he gets a sec­ond term.

Yet, there’s a dis­con­nect between what Rom­ney and his team are talk­ing about nation­ally and what he is run­ning on in the states, where his TV adver­tis­ing is largely focused on the econ­omy and jobs — vot­ers’ No. 1 issue — ahead of Wednesday’s pres­i­den­tial debate. All that’s leav­ing Rom­ney open to crit­i­cism that his cam­paign is search­ing for a win­ning pitch just one month before the elec­tion and with vot­ing under way in many states.

“Our coun­try seems to be at the mercy of events rather than shap­ing them. We’re not mov­ing them in a direc­tion that pro­tects our peo­ple or our allies. And that’s dan­ger­ous,” Rom­ney wrote in a col­umn pub­lished Mon­day in the Wall Street Journal.

The Obama cam­paign reacted force­fully, call­ing Romney’s for­eign pol­icy stances “inco­her­ent” and “reck­less, erratic and irresponsible.”

Rom­ney run­ning mate Paul Ryan piled on, telling radio host Laura Ingra­ham that Obama’s admin­is­tra­tion hasn’t given the pub­lic the full story on the cir­cum­stances that led to the death of U.S. Ambas­sador Chris Stevens in Benghazi.

“It’s really indica­tive of a broader fail­ure of this administration’s for­eign pol­icy and the cri­sis that is tak­ing place across the Mid­dle East,” Ryan said. “It is clear the administration’s pol­icy unraveled.”

Romney’s intense focus on for­eign pol­icy is intended to under­cut what the Obama cam­paign has seen as the president’s iron­clad inter­na­tional affairs cre­den­tials — and send a mes­sage to vot­ers that they can trust the Repub­li­can on for­eign pol­icy despite lim­ited expe­ri­ence. To that end, Romney’s advis­ers said he’s plan­ning a major for­eign pol­icy speech, to be deliv­ered some­time after Wednesday’s debate.

Obama cam­paign spokes­woman Jen Psaki was dismissive.

“There is no op-ed or no speech which we’ve heard he may or may not give at some point that is going to change the view of the Amer­i­can peo­ple that he has been reck­less, erratic and irre­spon­si­ble on for­eign pol­icy issues every time he has had an oppor­tu­nity to speak to them,” Psaki told reporters in Hen­der­son, Nev., where Obama is prepar­ing for Wednesday’s debate.

For­eign pol­icy is the lat­est in a series of polit­i­cal open­ings that Rom­ney has tried to exploit in recent weeks, as he has fallen behind the pres­i­dent in polls both in key bat­tle­ground state. National sur­veys show the pres­i­dent ahead in a tight con­test. In recent weeks, Rom­ney also has cas­ti­gated Obama on the coal indus­try, defense cuts, wealth redis­tri­b­u­tion and the president’s com­ment that it’s not pos­si­ble to change Wash­ing­ton from the inside.

But unlike some of those issues, Romney’s cam­paign hasn’t put seri­ous money behind the for­eign pol­icy line of criticism.

Paid TV ads in key states don’t largely men­tion inter­na­tional affairs. The third-party group Amer­i­can Cross­roads has a pro­duced a Web video assail­ing Obama’s for­eign pol­icy, but it’s not on the air. Polls show for­eign pol­icy far down on the list of vot­ers’ con­cerns and Obama leads Rom­ney on the issue.

Romney’s cam­paign had spent much of the year focus­ing its argu­ment against Obama’s han­dling of the economy.

Then came Sept. 11, and as unrest flared in the Mid­dle East, Rom­ney issued a late-night state­ment assail­ing Obama before it was clear that Stevens and three other Amer­i­cans had been killed in the ter­ror­ist attack on the con­sulate in Beng­hazi, Libya. The tim­ing of Romney’s ini­tial response prompted heart­burn within the GOP. Yet, Rom­ney pressed ahead with his crit­i­cism that Obama was a weak leader whose pos­ture abroad was hurt­ing U.S. inter­ests, and con­gres­sional Repub­li­cans have piled on about the administration’s chang­ing state­ments on the Libya attack.

Rom­ney cam­paign aides said inter­nal polls showed the crit­i­cism of Obama’s for­eign pol­icy res­onat­ing with vot­ers in the days after Stevens’ death. But any trac­tion Rom­ney was get­ting on that front was stunted when a video sur­faced of Rom­ney telling donors that 47 per­cent of Amer­i­cans believe they are vic­tims enti­tled to gov­ern­ment assis­tance. Obama has high­lighted that com­ment repeat­edly in TV ads and at cam­paign ral­lies, build­ing on his post-convention momentum.

Since then, the administration’s state­ments on Libya have evolved, with offi­cials strug­gling to explain just what hap­pened in Benghazi.

White House adviser David Plouffe seemed to strug­gle Sun­day on NBC’s “Meet the Press” when pressed on the matter.

“This was an event obvi­ously, a com­plex event. We’re only talk­ing about a mat­ter of weeks here,” Plouffe said. “So as infor­ma­tion was arrived at, as deter­mi­na­tions were made, that was shared with the Amer­i­can peo­ple. And I think again the focus needs to be how do we make sure that our facil­i­ties and our ambas­sadors and our per­son­nel are secure going forward.”

Repub­li­cans have looked to cap­i­tal­ize, rais­ing ques­tions about why the con­sulate in Beng­hazi wasn’t bet­ter pro­tected and why the ambas­sador wasn’t trav­el­ing with more security.

“It was either will­ful igno­rance or abysmal intel­li­gence to think that peo­ple come to spon­ta­neous demon­stra­tions with heavy weapons, mor­tars, and the attack goes on for hours,” Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., told CNN on Sunday.

AP News Posted by on Oct 1 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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