Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney outlined Tuesday an 
assertive American nationalism that would guide his foreign policy, 
calling for a more aggressive posture in confronting the United States’ 
rivals and more consistency in dealing with its allies.
      
Romney advisers had billed the half-hour speech before the 
Veterans of Foreign Wars National Convention here as a major foreign 
policy address, one his campaign originally said he intended to give months ago.
 The presumptive GOP nominee has spoken little about foreign policy 
recently, but on Tuesday he did so sharply on an issue generally 
considered a strength of President Obama’s. 
 He said he plans to refrain from criticizing the American president, 
Romney accused Obama of misjudging Russia, failing to contain Iran’s 
nuclear ambitions, coddling China, offending Israel and jeopardizing the
 U.S. military with budget cuts that Republican congressional leaders 
have supported.
The address, delivered with vigor, did not 
highlight the kind of specific policy approaches that Obama campaign 
advisers have called on Romney to present. At one point, Romney even 
endorsed Obama’s plan for withdrawing U.S. forces from Afghanistan by 
the end of 2014, a timeline he once criticized. He also detailed an 
approach to Iran’s nuclear program virtually identical to Obama’s.
But
 the address was long on the soaring language of American 
exceptionalism, and it echoed in places his campaign’s seminal foreign 
policy address, which he delivered last year at the Citadel. There, he called for a new “American century,” and he did so again in Reno before a largely receptive audience.
The lofty appeal to a mid-20th-century view of U.S. power stood in sharp contrast to Obama’s more calculated, realist approach to diplomacy. A Washington Post-ABC
 News poll published in May found that 48 percent of Americans supported
 Obama’s handling of foreign affairs, while 46 percent did not.“I
 am an unapologetic believer in the greatness of this country,” Romney 
told the audience to applause. “I am not ashamed of American power.”
With
 the economy ailing, the Obama campaign has often presented the 
president’s foreign policy record as a proxy of leadership and 
competence. 
His advisers have argued that he has been successful 
in restoring the nation’s image as a reliable global player, 
reinvigorating alliances neglected by his predecessor and engaging 
traditional antagonists. His winding down of two inherited wars — and 
the killing of terrorist leader Osama bin Laden — have been celebrated in campaign advertising and on the trail.
“It’s
 widely accepted that President Obama has an exceptionally strong record
 on national security issues,” Robert Gibbs, a former Obama White House 
press secretary who is now a senior campaign adviser, told reporters 
Monday in a conference call.
“And I think, quite frankly, that 
Mitt Romney is having a rather tough time making an argument against the
 president of the United States on these issues,” he sRomney told the VFW audience, which heard from Obama the previous day, 
that “the last few years have been a time of declining influence and 
missed opportunity.” He used words such as “diminished,” “devastation,” 
“faltered,” “misjudgment” and “abandonment” to describe the president’s 
record.aid. 
Romney described a country that has lost its way under Obama and 
warned that impending defense cuts, demanded by the agreement last year 
to raise the borrowing limit, could threaten national security.
He
 also criticized the leaks of classified material — about drone 
operations and the raid that killed bin Laden — that has appeared in 
various books, magazines and newspapers. He called on Obama to allow a 
“special counsel” to investigate the leaks, which he said were made to 
benefit Obama’s campaign.
“What kind of White House would reveal 
classified material for political gain?” Romney said. “I’ll tell you 
right now: Mine won’t.”
Aboard Air Force One, White House press 
secretary Jay Carney referred questions about Romney’s accusation to the
 federal prosecutors investigating the matter. He said the president has
 made it “abundantly clear” that he has no tolerance for leaks, which he
 said are damaging to national security.
Romney will leave 
Wednesday for a tour of England, Israel and Poland, and his itinerary 
helps illustrate the critique of Obama’s foreign policies that he 
offered Tuesday.
After beginning in London, where he will attend the Olympic Games, Romney is scheduled to head to Israel.
Obama has increased U.S. military aid to Israel and cooperated in the building of Israel’s missile-defense system, Iron Dome.
But
 the president has had a tense relationship with Prime Minister Benjamin
 Netanyahu, particularly over Israel’s settlement construction on land 
that Palestinians consider their future state.
Romney is likely to
 offer a clear contrast. But how the Republican, who during a forum last
 year played down a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian 
conflict, intends to speak about the conflict is unclear and may test 
his diplomatic fluency on a core issue.
In his speech, he said 
Obama is “fond of lecturing Israel’s leaders.” But, he said, “the people
 of Israel deserve better than what they have received from the leader 
of the free world.”
Iran probably will be the chief point of 
interest when Romney meets Netanyahu, whom he has known since the the 
mid-1970s, when they became friends as colleagues at the Boston 
Consulting Group.
“There is no greater danger in the world today 
than the prospect of the ayatollahs in Tehran possessing nuclear weapons
 capability,” Romney said. “Yet for all the talk and conferences, all 
the extensions and assurances, can anyone say we are farther from this 
danger now than four years ago?”
The solution he outlined, though,
 mirrors Obama’s approach — a series of strict sanctions “cutting off 
the regime’s source of wealth,” negotiations and access for nuclear 
inspectors. Obama has declined to rule out a military strike.
Romney’s
 last stop will be Poland, which, along with the Czech Republic, he used
 Tuesday as an example of Obama’s “abandonment of friends” because soon 
after taking office, the president reconfigured a George W. Bush-era 
missile-defense system to be based there.
Obama said the changes 
made the system more effective in stopping potential missile attacks 
from Iran or North Korea. At the same time, it was also more acceptable 
to Russia, which American hawks criticized as a sign of weakness toward a
 country whose ambitions are still suspect in the region.
Romney’s
 past characterization of Russia as the United States’ “No. 1 
geopolitical foe” also has drawn criticism from the Obama campaign, 
namely Vice President Biden, who has accused Romney of being trapped in a
 Cold War mentality.
 I'll vote for President Romney because he's our 
only hope in taking America back from the lazy, self/absorbed, libbies 
who don't love our country 
We The People
We The People Will NOT Be Silenced!
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
November Will Tell!
This November will tell us what kind of country we want to have. 
Do we want a socialist nanny-state where the federal government wipes your butt from womb-to-tomb as Obama envisions? Or do we want freedom from a punitive all-powerful federal government where we're free to prosper without Big Brother (the federal government) trying to control every aspect of our lives as Romney envisions?
As a LEGAL American, Barack Obama mandates that AGAINST THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE I need to show proof of insurance or pay a penalty tax.
At the same time, Barack Obama says that forcing ILLEGAL aliens to show proof of citizenship "threatens to undermine basic notions of fairness that we cherish as Americans."
Chief Justice Roberts was wise to let the people decide if they want this horrid law to stand -- by either keeping in-office our socialist president Obama this November -- or by voting in Romney that does not apologize for United States excellence.
Do we want a socialist nanny-state where the federal government wipes your butt from womb-to-tomb as Obama envisions? Or do we want freedom from a punitive all-powerful federal government where we're free to prosper without Big Brother (the federal government) trying to control every aspect of our lives as Romney envisions?
As a LEGAL American, Barack Obama mandates that AGAINST THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE I need to show proof of insurance or pay a penalty tax.
At the same time, Barack Obama says that forcing ILLEGAL aliens to show proof of citizenship "threatens to undermine basic notions of fairness that we cherish as Americans."
Chief Justice Roberts was wise to let the people decide if they want this horrid law to stand -- by either keeping in-office our socialist president Obama this November -- or by voting in Romney that does not apologize for United States excellence.
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