Iran Again at Center of Republican Debate

Strait of Hormuz

Strait of Hormuz

By Lauren Appelbaum and Melissa Weiss

Tampa, Fla., Jan. 24 – Iran again took center stage at Monday night’s Republican candidates’ debate in Florida, with Tehran’s threat to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz in the spotlight.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said if Iran were to actually close the Strait, “of course it’s an act of war.” Some 20 percent of the world’s oil supply flows through the waterway.

“We want to show Iran, any action of that nature will be considered an act of war,” Romney said. “America is going to be keep those sea lanes open.”

Rep. Ron Paul thought the United States already started a war with Iran. “We’re blockading them. Can you imagine what we would do if somebody blockaded the Gulf of Mexico? That would be an act of war. So the act of war has already been committed and this is a retaliation.”

Both former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Sen. Rick Santorum attacked President Obama for his handling of the situation.

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Last Night’s Debate: Candidates speak out on the Middle East

Republican Presidential Candidates at the FOX News / Wall Street Journal Debate

Republican Presidential Candidates at the FOX News / Wall Street Journal Debate

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Myrtle Beach, S.C., Jan. 17 – Several of the remaining Republican presidential candidates spoke about foreign policy issues concerning the Middle East at the FOX News / Wall Street Journal debate last night.

Asked about Turkey, Gov. Rick Perry said it is “time for us to have a conversation about whether or not they belong to be in NATO.” In addition, Perry called for zeroing out aid to Turkey, a statement he has said several times during the campaign season regarding foreign aid to all countries. “We need to send a powerful message to countries like Iran, and Syria and Turkey that the United States is serious and that we’re going to have to be dealt with.”

Sen. Rick Santorum called Syria and President Bashar al-Assad a threat to Israel. He called for working with the international community and the Arab League to remove Assad from power. But he stopped short of calling for military action. “As far as a military mission on our own, no, I do not support a military mission into Syria, but we should be much more aggressive in following through with policies that effectuate the removal of Assad for the benefit of the Syrian people and for our neighbor — and for their neighbor, Israel.”

Perry also spoke about Israel, receiving applause for stating “there should be no space between the United States and Israel, period.”

Rep. Ron Paul discussed “a difference between military spending and defense spending.”  For reference on Paul’s assertion of two sorts of defense expenditures, read the Department of Defense budget for the 2012 fiscal year. Paul’s campaign later sent out an email with the subject line: “Paul’s Plan DOES NOT Freeze Pentagon Budget.” What the plan does do, however, is end foreign wars, foreign aid and welfare.

Perry: Bring Iran to their knees

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Rick Perry at the Cafe Mom Townhall

Myrtle Beach, S.C., Jan. 16 – Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry stressed he would use military force against Iran if needed. “Let me share with you this – having worn that uniform and having right knowledge about our power and our ability, we will go strike, we will go strike hard, we will use everything. Forget about political correctness. From my standpoint, it’s about winning.”

Perry also expressed his displeasure about how the Obama administration is handling Iran.

“I’m really concerned about this administration and their lukewarm approach to what’s going on in the Middle East,” Perry said to a group of mothers during a CafeMom Townhall. He said he would use every tool – civic, overt, covert, sanctions.

Perry said the U.S. should have been sanctioning the Iran Central Bank for years and should have stronger sanctions now. “Bring them to their knees if that’s what’s required.”

The townhall was co-hosted by Lindsay Ferrier, CafeMom’s election correspondent, and Frank Luntz, political consultant and pollster.

Santorum, Perry Court Social Conservatives

Sen. Rick Santorum at Faith and Freedom Coalition Prayer Breakfast

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Myrtle  Beach, S.C., Jan. 15 – The day after Sen. Rick Santorum won the backing of 150 evangelical leaders, which was a political blow for fellow Republican presidential candidate Gov. Rick Perry, both men addressed the Faith and Freedom Coalition Prayer Breakfast in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

Gov. Rick Perry at Faith and Freedom Coalition Prayer Breakfast

“I was very blessed yesterday that a group of conservative leaders, about 150 or so, got together and in many ways miraculously were able to come together,” Santorum said to the nearly 300 attendees at the breakfast. “I don’t think that ever happens with a group of Christian leaders. They were able to miraculously come together and stand in support of my candidacy.”

Yesterday in Georgetown, S.C., Perry ignored a reporter when she asked how he felt about the group of prominent evangelical leaders endorsing Santorum.

UPDATE: Later on Sunday, Perry responded to the question on CNN’s State of the Union. “Obviously you’d like to get every endorsement of the groups that are in line with your beliefs,” Perry said to Candy Crowley. “But you’re not going to do that. So our focus is on the people of South Carolina.”
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Perry: I love Israel “with all my heart”

Rick Perry poses with Georgetown resident Linda Harper and her Jerusalem flag

Rick Perry poses with Georgetown resident Linda Harper and her Jerusalem flag

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Georgetown, S.C., Jan. 14 – During a main street walk in Georgetown, S.C., a woman approached Gov. Rick Perry with a question she considers very important to her: “Do you love Israel?”

Perry responded, “Yes, I do, with all my heart.”

And that was what it took for Georgetown, S.C., resident Linda Harper to put her support behind Rick Perry in South Carolina’s upcoming primary scheduled for Jan. 21.

“I feel that Rick Perry is the most pro-Israel,” Harper said after speaking with the former Texas governor at the Augustus Caroline Fine Furnishings and Antiques store. She said she was impressed that her question did not catch him off-guard and he immediately affirmed his support for Israel.

“Then later he took pictures of me with the Jerusalem flag, twice,” Harper continued. “I feel that if a candidate is willing to take a picture for the world to see with Jerusalem, that it’s not just words, that he’s really truly serious because he’s taking that stand.”

After the main street walk where he interacted one-on-one with many of the more than 40 voters who joined Perry for the walk through several of the stores on Front Street, Perry gave an interview to the Savage Report where he talked about his policy regarding Iran.

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How is Arab World Viewing Republican Race?

By Alan Elsner, Editor-in-Chief

Washington, Jan. 12 – Much has been written about the strong commitment to Israel expressed by all the Republican presidential candidates except Ron Paul. How is this being taken in the Arab world?

Not so well.

Many Arab commentators attribute the support of Republicans for Israel not to any conviction they might have to Israel but the perfidious “Israel Lobby” which according to these analysts controls much of what happens in the United States.

The fact that these characterizations hark back to classic anti-Semitic blood libels, such as the notorious “Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” does not deter these commentators.

It does not seem to occur to them that Republicans like Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry (and indeed President Obama as well) support Israel because of their deep, abiding belief in the Jewish state and what it stands for and the democratic values it shares with the United States.

Their commentaries show that the “culture of hate” that still persists in much of the Arab world toward Jews and Israel also colors views toward the U.S. democratic process.

Perry: “I would send troops back into Iraq”

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Washington, Jan. 7 – At tonight’s ABC News / Yahoo News / WMUR-TV Republican presidential primary debate, Gov. Rick Perry said he would send U.S. troops back into Iraq to prevent “the Iranians to come back into Iraq and take over that country.”

“I think it’s a huge error for us,” he said. “We’re going to see Iran in my opinion, move back in at literally the speed of light. They’re going to move back in, and all of the work we’ve done, every young man that has lost his life in that country will have been for nothing because we’ve got a president that does not understand what’s going on in that region.”

Perry accused President Obama of simply placating Democrats by leaving Iraq too early. “This president wants to kowtow to his liberal, leftist base and move out those men and women,” the governor said.

President Bush had signed an agreement with the Iraqi government in 2008 that said U.S. forces would leave Iraq at this time. But Perry still disagreed that it was carried out. “He could have renegotiated that time frame.”

GOP Candidates on Energy

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Washington, Jan. 6 – U.S. politicians have been talking about developing alternatives to Middle East oil for many years – so it’s no surprise that every Republican running for president in 2012 has weighed in on the issue.

However their emphasis has been more on boosting domestic oil production than on alternative energy. According to a report this week by the non-partisan advocacy group “Securing America’s Future Energy,” the candidates largely agree that the United States should ramp up domestic oil and gas production by cutting regulations that impede drilling and providing oil companies new access to federal land and water. They also have called for eliminating subsidies for renewable energy sources and curbing the EPA’s role in regulating energy production.

None of the candidates has spoken much about alternatives to traditional oil, coal and natural gas which was a strong theme in President Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign and is likely to be so again this 2012. U.S. candidates could look at Israel’s groundbreaking work for inspiration.

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GOP Candidates Reaffirm Support for Israel

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Washington, Dec. 7 – At the Republican Jewish Coalition Presidential Forum, all of the Republican candidates in attendance reaffirmed their commitment to America’s relationship with Israel and to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich pledged to reform the State Department and move the U.S. embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The nearly 500 RJC members attending the day-long forum responded in a resounding round of applause with many jumping to their feet.

Speaking later in the afternoon, Congresswoman Michele Bachmann made the same pledge. “It will be on inauguration day under my administration that we will move our embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.” She said she already has a donor who offered to pay the moving costs for the embassy and ambassador. Bachmann also said her maiden visit as president would include meeting with the prime minister and speaking to the Knesset.

Governor Mitt Romney restated his promise to travel to Israel on his first foreign trip, a statement he originally made at a debate on Nov. 22. “I will reaffirm as a vital national interest Israel’s existence as a Jewish state. I want the world to know that the bonds between Israel and the United States are unshakable. I want every country in the region that harbors aggressive designs against Israel to understand that their ambition is futile and that pursuing it will cost them dearly.”

Gingrich questioned the Obama administration’s policies toward the peace process, stressing the need for violence to stop first. “Why, in a peace process, would Israel need to have a missile defense from Gaza? Can you imagine if our neighbor was firing missiles at us?”

Ambassador Jon Huntsman added, “It is time for the world to understand who our friends and allies are. It is time for the world to understand that we stand with Israel.”

Governor Rick Perry, who has come under fire for calling for all foreign aid to start at zero, made a passionate case for American support of Israel, saying he has a personal connection due to numerous visits to the country.

Perry differentiated foreign aid from strategic defense aid in order to get out of the zero out foreign aid problem with Israel. Saying Israel receives defense aid, not foreign aid, Perry stressed how Israel is America’s strategic ally and that “strategic defensive aid under a Perry administration will increase to Israel.”

On Iran, Romney called for both covert and overt actions to prevent the ayatollahs from obtaining nuclear weapons. “I would not meet with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He should be excluded from diplomatic society. He should be indicted for the crime of incitement to genocide under Article III of the Genocide Convention. Iran’s ayatollahs will not be permitted to obtain nuclear weapons on my watch. A nuclear-armed Iran is not only a threat to Israel; it is a threat to the entire world.  Our friends must never fear that we will not stand by them in an hour of need. Our enemies should never doubt our resolve.”

Gingrich pledged to follow the Reagan playbook and called for covert operations in Iran and said he would focus on the gas supply, with the aim of targeting Iran’s lone gas refinement facility for daily sabotage. He also said a Gingrich administration would support and fund dissident groups. Commenting on the Iranian regime, “It is better to stop them early than to stop them late.”

Calling Iran a serious threat to the future of the United States, Senator Rick Santorum said, “The United States, not Israel, will stop Iran from getting the nuclear weapon, period.”

Huntsman said he could not live with the outcome of a nuclear Iran. Therefore, “for me, all options are on the table.”

Congressman Ron Paul was not in attendance at the forum. He was not invited to participate. Soon President Obama will do major outreach to Jewish Americans at the upcoming conference of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. Thousands are expected to attend.

Perry: Aid Will Increase to Israel

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Washington, Dec. 7 – At a time when many Israel supporters are angry with Gov. Rick Perry over his recent comments on aid to Israel, the Republican candidate for president attempted to clear up the situation before the nearly 500 people in attendance at the Republican Jewish Coalition Forum. He differentiated foreign aid from strategic defense aid in order to get out of the zero foreign aid problem with Israel. Saying Israel receives defense aid, not foreign aid, Perry stressed how Israel is America’s strategic ally and that “strategic defensive aid under a Perry administration will increase to Israel.”

On Iran Perry said the situation “increasingly leaves only two options: a military strike or a nuclear Iran.”

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