Washington – Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump says he wants an apology from Hillary Clinton for saying that the Islamic State group used videos of his comments about Muslims to recruit militants. Trump told NBC’s Today show on Monday that “she lies about everything”. He said: “You’re talking about people dying. You’re talking about making up tapes and videos which don’t exist.”
During the Democratic debate on Saturday, Clinton said that Trump had become the Islamic State’s “best recruiter” and that “they’re going to people showing videos of Donald Trump insulting Islam and Muslims in order to recruit more radical jihadists”.
There was no evidence to back the claim, and a spokesperson later said “she didn’t have a particular video in mind”. Clinton and other Democratic presidential hopefuls used Donald Trump as a political bogeyman on Saturday to highlight their own calls to defeat jihadist extremists without using the bigotry and bluster employed by their top Republican rival.
Former secretary of state Clinton, Senator Bernie Sanders and Maryland ex-governor Martin O’Malley each hit on the need to boost national security, raise the minimum wage and protect rights of women, minorities and the disadvantaged as they faced off in New Hampshire.
But they had heated exchanges on the economy, guns in America, tackling the terrorist threat, and the role of the United States in the broader world.
With just over six weeks before the first votes are cast in the nomination race, on February 1 in Iowa, Sanders and O’Malley are running out of time to blunt the momentum of the former secretary of state, who is 25 points ahead of rival Sanders in a national polling compiled by RealClearPolitics.com.
It was their party’s third debate of the primary election season – the last of 2015 and their first since the attacks in San Bernardino, California, where a radicalised married couple killed 14 people. But the candidates also took turns hitting the Trump punching bag, as they hurled outrage about the Republican’s fear-mongering and recent controversial comments about immigrants – in particular, his call for a ban on Muslims entering the United States.
Americans, Clinton said, “need to make sure that the really discriminatory messages that Trump is sending around the world don’t fall on receptive ears”.
O’Malley also offered a harsh rebuke to the “political danger” wielded by Trump and other “unscrupulous leaders (who) try to turn us upon each other”. The country will rise to the challenge of the IS extremists, but only if Americans never surrender their values “to the fascist pleas of billionaires with big mouths. We’re a better country than this.”
Trump’s apparent popularity has only grown in recent weeks since his most controversial remarks. The political neophyte tops most Republican national polls and is putting establishment candidates like Jeb Bush in knots.
While the Democrats united against Trump, Sanders clashed at length with Clinton over how to tackle extremism, opposing her call for a no-fly zone over Syria and for focusing on ousting that country’s President Bashar al-Assad.
Sanders, who is more comfortable talking about economic inequality and financial abuse, topics that are the cornerstones of his campaign, was deeply sceptical. “The United States at the same time can’t successfully fight Assad and ISIS,” he said. “ISIS now is the major priority. Let’s get rid of Assad later.”
O’Malley pointedly looked back at how several US-backed regime changes fomented chaos. He singled out Libya in 2011, when Clinton was the top US diplomat and supported ousting Muammar Gaddafi, only to see the country descend into chaos, with large swathes now susceptible to becoming jihadist safe havens. “We probably let our lust for regime toppling get ahead of the practical considerations for stability in that region.”
Sanders piled on, reminding viewers of Clinton’s 2002 Senate vote authorising then president George W Bush’s use of military force in Iraq. Clinton insisted she was not ready to send US boots into Syria and Iraq, saying she had a strategy to “combat and defeat ISIS without getting us involved in another ground war”. – AFP



