Trump adviser
slaps Hillary with mega list of failures, 'Libya in flames, Syria in flames, Iraq exploding, Iran deal not
working, ISIS not dismantled', by Greg Corombos, 6/4/16, WND
A high-level foreign
policy adviser for presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump
says Hillary Clinton is wrong to assert that Trump is unqualified to be commander
in chief or lacks the temperament for the job, and he says Clinton’s record as
secretary of state should be the most worrisome foreign policy consideration in
this campaign.
Dr. Walid Phares is a
longtime terrorism expert and professor of Middle East studies. He is also an
accomplished author. He role as a foreign policy adviser for Trump was made
public in recent weeks.
Clinton delivered a
blistering attack against Trump’s foreign policy statements in her speech on
Thursday, while also alleging her likely general election opponent lacks the
character for the job.
“Like many across the
country and around the world, I believe the person the Republicans have
nominated for president cannot do the job,” Clinton said.
Phares said there’s no
doubt Clinton knows more people on the international stage and has more
experience dealing with vital issues, but he told WND and Radio
America her track record is one of failure.
“Once given all this
power and all this ability to receive information, what did she do?” Phares
asked. “Look at Libya in flames, Syria in flames, Iraq exploding, the Iran deal
not working, ISIS not dismantled. The plans are not working. Of course, the
reset button that she brought to Moscow led to major crisis with Russia in
Ukraine, in Crimea, let alone the rise of jihadi homegrown cells around the
world.
“So if you base your
judgment on how she strategically positioned herself, at least in the region
let alone other regions in terms of North Korea or Russia, then we think it
would be much better to have another candidate become president of the United
States,” Phares said.
Aside from alleging Trump
doesn’t understand the the nuances of foreign policy, Clinton also said the GOP
standard bearer lacks the temperament for the job, even suggesting Trump could
start a war over an insult.
Phares rejects the
notion that Trump’s temperament disqualifies him from the job on two fronts.
First, he calls it “naive” to judge someone’s temperament for the job based on
what is said in the heat of the campaign. Second, he said Trump’s career proves
he does have the gravitas for the job.
“Because he has been a
person who has been in the center of a network for over 20 years – true, it’s
not a political network, but it’s an international business network – meeting
with politicians, meeting with decision-makers, he has the actual
temperament to become the president of the United States,” Phares said.
Among other criticisms,
Clinton also attacked Trump for not having any concrete policy ideas on some of
the thorniest foreign-policy issues in the world.
“Donald Trump’s ideas
aren’t just different. They are dangerously incoherent,” Clinton said. “They’re
not even really ideas, just a series of bizarre rants, personal feuds and
outright lies.”
Phares said the true
test of leadership is what people do once they’re faced with the relevant
information. On that front, he said Trump is clearly stronger than Clinton.
“If Mr. Trump were given
the same information about Libya, that Ansar Al-Sharia and other groups that we
were arming and training were actually jihadists, would he have accepted that
the U.S. arm them and train them? Would he have accepted the policy we had on
Libya? Would he have accepted that those weapons would be traveling to Syria
and later on create the context for ISIS? No,” Phares said.
He wasn’t done.
“Would he have accepted,
with the same information given to him by the negotiators or the intelligence
community, that a deal would be cut with the Iranian ayatollahs and $150
billion would be sent to them? Of course not,” Phares said.
“It’s about your
judgment when you are dealing with a strategic organization,” he said. “She had
her strategic organization at the State Department. He had a strategic
organization with multinational companies. We saw that the results were very
different.”
Phares said Trump
is already receiving briefings from retired military officers and former
intelligence personnel. His formal national security briefings will begin after
he becomes the Republican nominee next month.
But Phares said Trump’s
approach to complex issues as he studies them is encouraging to him. “He is
very inquisitive. He will ask many, many questions,” Phares said. “There are
two types of questions that are important that many people who met with him
over the many years and months with regard to these international issues (point
out). Not just many questions. He always asks the downside of a solution and
the alternative to this solution, which tells me that’s how a decision-maker
should behave.”
http://www.wnd.com/2016/06/trump-adviser-slaps-hillary-with-mega-list-of-failures/
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