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Donald Trump Responds to Accusations of Flip-Flopping on Iraq War
Trump pointed to his 2004 interview in which he did speak out against the war, but by then, many other supporters came around to the same conclusion.
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PolitiFact, a nonpartisan fact-checking website, rated Trump’s claim about always opposing the war as false based on those interviews. He said Clinton exposed “classified information to actors on her unsecured, I would say home brew, email server” and that it has “weakened the decision making” in Iraq, Syria and Libya and “turned those countries into a breeding ground for radical Islamic terror”. Still, the stark opposition in those words not only helps to illustrate how Clinton and Trump define leadership, but how incredibly different they appear poised to treat the job. But, of course, if you look at the polls, a lot of people are getting a little exhausted.
However, in September 2002, Trump phoned into Howard Stern’s radio show to discuss the one-year anniversary of the terror attacks on NY and got a chance to express his views on the idea of launching a war against Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.
In a brief news conference en route to a speech in Charlotte, N.C., Clinton said her opponent “trash talked generals”, made inappropriate about officials who conducted national security briefings, and made “scary” comments suggesting that he preferred Putin to President Obama.
“The Iraq War began in March 2003, more than a year before this story ran, thus nullifying Trump’s timeline”, Esquire wrote.
The school has been found chronically deficient by the state.
Democrats have been fighting Republican-created laws in some states that restrict early voting or require government identification, winning a recent battle in North Carolina.
On a performance index for achievement, it got a “D” on one combined score based on how many students passed two tests, and and “F” on a measure of how students performed on the tests. Everything is a game. Lots of people know him and the polls show that. Trump responded, “Yeah, I guess so”.
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The NBC News Commander-in-Chief Forum drew 14.7 million viewers, roughly 3.4 million of whom watched on the MSNBC simulcast while the remainder tuned in to NBC broadcast.