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Trump pledges ‘Cold War’ terror fight, ‘extreme vetting’ on immigration
He said political correctness has replaced common sense, which has allowed terrorists to slip through.
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To prevent the spread of radical Islamic terrorism, Trump suggested he would not push for regime change as president, and he would disrupt terrorists’ activities online to recruit and promote their propaganda and he would work coordinate with other countries interested in destroying the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
His campaign aides said a new ideological test for admission to the United States would vet applicants for their stance on issues like religious freedom, gender equality and gay rights. The time is overdue to develop a new screening test for the threats we facetoday.
Vice President Joe Biden speaking at a campaign event with Hillary Clinton said that Mr Trump’s claim that Mr Obama and Mrs Clinton had “founded” IS proved his views to be “dangerous” and “un-American”, and that it had made USA soldiers in Iraq less safe already. I call it extreme, extreme vetting.
The campaign did not clarify how USA officials would verify responses to the questionnaires or how much manpower would be needed to complete such vetting.
In a foreign policy speech Monday, Trump says people who “do not believe in our Constitution, or who support bigotry and hatred” will be barred from entering the country.
Trump did not use the words that got him into hot water last week – that Obama and Hillary Clinton co-founded ISIS – but he got some of his strongest applause when he held their policies and the execution of those policies to blame.
He picked a fight with the parents of a Muslim U.S. Army captain who was killed in Iraq and falsely accused President Barack Obama and Clinton of being “co-founders” of Islamic State. His supporters were quiet through one of the few passages that amounted to a foreign-policy strategy that Mr Trump could realistically deliver as president, possibly because it was a fresh statement of his desire to forge closer links with the authoritarian government of Russian Federation led by President Vladimir Putin, and “find common ground” in the fight against IS and in Syria policy. “This summer, there has been an ISIS attack launched outside the war zones of the Middle East every 84 hours”, he said.
He attempted to also draw a distinction between himself and Clinton on Iraq, saying she voted for the Iraq War while he, “a private citizen, whose personal opinions on such matters was not sought. nonetheless publicly expressed my private doubts about the invasion”.
Donald Trump on Monday, August 15, laid out a United States blueprint for defeating global terrorism in partnership with North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and Middle East allies, demanding extreme restrictions on immigration and likening the fight to the Cold War.
US officials estimated at one point as many as 6,000 extremists in the North African country.
Vice President Joe Biden on Monday hammered away at the GOP nominee.
During his national security speech in Ohio, Trump also reversed his stance on working with North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, saying they’ve changed their policies to more adequately handle terror threats. That includes Michael Wilson of Portage County. These are problems like we have never had before.
The crowd at YSU was by invitation.
The speech, titled “Understanding the Threat: Radical Islam and the Age of Terror”, started with Trump talking about how the United States defeated fascism, Nazism and communism during the 20th century.
That left it up to his warm-up act – former New York Mayor Rudy Guiliani – to be extemporaneous, and Guiliani stumbled a bit as he was introducing Trump’s running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence…
You have left for this month.
So, this time around, perhaps realizing there wasn’t much point in overselling things, the campaign merely talked of a big, important speech.
Trump also pledged to crack down on anyone or anything deemed to support radical Islamic terrorism. “I was saying this constantly and to whoever would listen: keep the oil, keep the oil, keep the oil!” “I actually don’t think it’s a rollback”.
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He said in March 2007 the US should declare victory and withdraw troops because Iraq was going to get further bogged down in civil strife.