Ask bin Laden if I follow policy of appeasement: Barack Obama
"Ask Osama bin Laden," said an otherwise calm US President Barack Obama in an icy riposte to fierce criticism from several Republican White House hopefuls alleging that he was following a policy of appeasement on the foreign policy front.
"Ask Osama bin Laden and the 22 out of 30 top al-Qaeda leaders who've been taken off the field whether I engage in appeasement -- or whoever's left out there, ask them about that," Obama said at a news conference on Thursday.
Newt Gingrich, the leading Republican candidate said: "America is the first business of the State Department, not appeasing our opponents".
But he said he was ‘very, very worried’. "It's based on a State Department which has consistently engaged in appeasement," Gingrich said at a meeting yesterday.
Mitt Romney, another leading Republican presidential candidate said: "Internationally, President Obama has adopted an appeasement strategy."
"Appeasement betrays a lack of faith in America, in American strength and in America's future," alleged Romney.
He alleged that like others among the Washington elite, Obama ‘believes that America's role as the leader of the world is a thing of the past, that this is going to be a post-American century, perhaps an Asian century.’
"American strength, he imagines, will eventually be entirely or partially eclipsed, and so he seeks to appease those he believes will balance us or who might challenge our leadership in the future," Romney said.
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