In the defining
moment of a testy debate, President Barack Obama lashed into Mitt Romney on
Tuesday over the Republican's criticism of his handling of a deadly attack on
the U.S. diplomatic mission in Libya and sought to cast him as unfit to become
commander-in-chief.
Moving to
regain lost ground after a weak performance in the first presidential debate,
Obama fought back against his rival's accusations that he had played down the
Sept. 11 assault by Islamist militants in Benghazi that killed the U.S.
ambassador and three other Americans.
Romney,
who dominated the candidates' previous encounter, appeared stunned as Obama
launched a finger-wagging counterattack over an issue that has become a
flashpoint with just three weeks to go in a presidential race considered too
close to call.
The
exchange came near the end of a debate dominated mostly by arguments over the
economy, jobs and taxes, considered voters' main concerns in the Nov. 6
election.
Romney and
his aides have sought to use the Benghazi incident - as well as anti-American
unrest in other parts of the Arab world - to dent Obama's national security
credentials and accuse him of pursuing a failed Middle East policy.
But Obama
came out swinging in their second debate at Hofstra University in Hempstead,
New York, accusing Romney of exploiting the Benghazi attack in an effort to
score "offensive" political points.
"While
we were still dealing with our diplomats being threatened, Governor Romney put
out a press release, trying to make political points, and that's not how a
commander-in-chief operates" Obama said, referring to the Republican's
initial criticism of the administration's response before the full extent of
the bloodshed was known.
TESTY
EXCHANGE
Obama and
Romney argued testily in front of a group of undecided voters over whether
Obama had come out fast enough in describing the Libya attack as terrorism, and
the president appeared to get the better of his opponent.
"I
stood in the Rose Garden and I told the American people and the world that we
are going to find out exactly what happened, that this was an act of
terror," Obama said.
Romney was
incredulous. He challenged Obama's assertion, apparently unaware of Obama's
remarks the morning after the Benghazi attack.
"Get
the transcript," Obama told Romney in the closest thing to a smack-down
moment in the 90-minute debate.
"He
did, in fact, sir," moderator Candy Crowley said, siding with Obama.
"He did call it an act of terror."
A
transcript of the Rose Garden appearance that day shows Obama said: "...no
acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation."
But
despite that comment, some of Obama's top aides had initially attributed the
Benghazi violence to protests over an anti-Islam film and said it was not
premeditated, before finally
acknowledging
much later that it was a terrorist attack.
And Obama,
in a Sept. 24 taping of an appearance on ABC's "The View" program,
also seemed to hedge when he was asked whether Benghazi was an act of
terrorism. He said it "wasn't just a mob action" but pointed to an
ongoing investigation.
Obama said
for the first time on Tuesday he was "ultimately responsible" for the
safety and security of the Americans killed in the attack. "I'm the
president and I'm always responsible," he said.
Seeking to
recover from his apparent misstep, Romney pointed to the administration's
shifting explanations of the events in Benghazi, suggesting it had been an
attempt to mislead.
"It
took them a long time to say this was a terrorist act by a terrorist
group," he said.
In the
months before the deadly attack in Benghazi, Libya, U.S. and allied
intelligence agencies warned the White House and State Department repeatedly
that the region was becoming an increasingly dangerous vortex for jihadist
groups loosely linked or sympathetic to al Qaeda, according to U.S. officials.
Despite
those warnings and bold public displays by Islamist militants around Benghazi,
embassies in the region were advised to project a sense of calm and normalcy in
the run-up to the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.
Romney's
supporters have accused the administration of being slow to label the attack as
terrorism to avoid detracting from the president's campaign narrative of being
a strong world leader who put al Qaeda on the path to defeat.
Polls have
shown national security a strong point for Obama with voters, especially after
the killing of Osama bin Laden.
Going on
the offensive, Obama sought to depict Romney, who has little foreign policy
experience and has stumbled during his occasional forays on the world stage, as
ill-prepared to take on the role of commander-in-chief in a dangerous world.
Romney
fired back, saying the Benghazi incident "calls into question the
president's whole policy in the Middle East."
"Look
what's happening in Syria, in Egypt, now in Libya. Consider the distance
between ourselves and Israel," Romney said. "We have Iran four years
closer to a nuclear bomb."
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