GOP candidates court Jewish Republicans:
I ama goodo boy now, (I am a good boy now)
I had a cat that seemed depressed, I took it to animal psychiatrist, and she suggested that I tell the cat every day "you ara goodo boy now" (you are a good boy now). I remember this statement when I heard the Republican candidates competing to satisfy the Jewish Republican and their masters in Israel.
Newt Gingrich Stupid and ignorant ideas
Newt Gingrich
Calls Palestinians an 'Invented' People
"I think that we've had an invented
Palestinian people who are in fact Arabs, and who were historically part of the
Arab community. And they had a chance to go many places, and for a variety of
political reasons we have sustained this war against Israel now since the 1940s,
and it's tragic," he said.
This is the kind of people that want to be President of USA
Land of the free: what a sick joke
This is how low the American foreign policy can get
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/12/07/republicans-court-jewish-republicans/?iref=allsearch
December 7th, 2011
(CNN) - All but one of the Republican presidential candidates made their case to Jewish voters Wednesday, voicing their support for Israel and criticizing Iran while uniformly hitting President Barack Obama's strategy of appeasement on the world stage.
Speaking before
the Republican Jewish Coalition in Washington, D.C., the candidates stressed the
importance of the United States standing with Israel, something they charged
Obama has failed to do in his first years in office.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who has said he will zero out all foreign aid from the
United States if elected president, appeared to fully reverse course on the
issue during his remarks.
"Strategic defensive aid in all forms will increase to Israel," Perry said, after calling Israel America's strongest ally in the Middle East.
"Israel shares a commitment to our core principles of personal freedom," Perry said. "And yet, President Obama systematically undermines that relationship with Israel, specifically on the question of a negotiated settlement with the Palestinian people."
Perry also suggested recent comments he deemed anti-Israel were the result of the current administration's attitudes.
"This torrent of hostility towards Israel doesn't seem to be coordinated, it doesn't," Perry said. "It seems from my perspective to be a natural expression of this administration's attitude towards Israel."
The long-serving governor referenced recent comments by Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, in which he said Israel needed to "just get back to the damn table" and negotiate with the Palestinians, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's questioning aspects of Israeli democracy and U.S. Ambassador to Belgium Howard Gutman's statement blaming anti-Semitism among Muslims on the failures of Israelis.
The Panetta and Gutman comments in particular were used in lines of attack throughout the speeches Wednesday.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich called Panetta's comments "utterly outrageous."
"Can you imagine if our next door neighbor were firing missiles at us what we'd say 'Oh, could we come to the table?'" Gingrich said. "How about saying to Hamas, give up violence and come to the table. How about saying to the PLA [Palestine Liberation Army], recognize Israel and come to the table. This one sided continuing pressure that says it's always Israel's fault no matter how bad the other side is has to stop."
Gingrich also said he would ask former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton to serve as his secretary of state, only after disparaging current Secretary of State Clinton.
"The fact that Secretary [Hillary] Clinton could talk about discrimination against women in Israel and then meet with Saudis?" he said.
But one of the greatest threats facing Israel and the United States, the candidates agreed, is Iran. They called for tougher sanctions, including on their central bank and stressed the importance of Iran not becoming a nuclear capable country.
"We have to stop them," former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum said of Iran. "The United States will stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon, period."
Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota equated current Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has called for Israel to be wiped off the map, to Adolf Hitler.
"Today a mad man is speaking once again and it seems the world isn't really listening, though Iran's president has made his intentions for Israel abundantly clear," Bachmann said.
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said Ahmadinejad should be "excluded form diplomatic society."
"A nuclear-armed Iran is not only a threat to Israel, it is a threat to the entire world," Romney said. "Our friends must never fear that we will not stand by them in an hour of need. Our enemies should never doubt our resolve."
Six candidates in total addressed the gathering attempting to court the Jewish vote ahead of the next presidential election. Jewish voters supported the Democratic nominees for president by large margins during the last two election cycles, backing then-Sen. Barack Obama over Sen. John McCain by a 78% to 21% margin in 2008 and Sen. John Kerry over then-President George W. Bush by a 74% to 25% margin in 2004, according to CNN exit polling.
And the day's events were also not without the infusion of 2012 presidential politics. Gingrich preemptively challenged Obama to seven three hour-long Lincoln-Douglas style debates if he becomes the GOP nominee. If the president has not accepted his proposal by the Republican convention, he said he will use the White House as his scheduler.
"Wherever the president goes, I will show up four hours later," Gingrich said. "I doubt if they can take the pressure for more than two or three weeks. But if they would rather have me chase him all the way to Election Day and have the country watch a man afraid to defend his own record, I think that will work equally well."
Santorum suggested no one take the advice of Vice President Joe Biden, who he served with in the Senate, especially on issues of world politics. When attempting to determine a world view, Santorum said one should find out "what Joe Biden thinks and take the opposite opinion."
"You will be right 100% of the time, not 99, 100% of the time," he added.
Jon Huntsman, who served as the president's U.S. ambassador to China, said Americans are no longer listening to Obama.
"Nobody's paying attention. It doesn't matter if he puts a small pro-growth proposal on the table, people have tuned out and now they're looking to 2012," Huntsman said at the event.
Rep. Ron Paul of Texas was the only candidate not invited to the gathering because of his views on Israel that the organization calls "extreme."
Paul, who is making his third bid for the White House, said his views were portrayed "unfairly" as anti-Israel and that he intends to explain his positions further on his website.
"It's a private organization, too. So me being very much aware of what private organizations can do, I don't have much recourse," Paul said on CNN's "Newsroom" Wednesday. "But I think in public opinion, people will ask questions, why isn't he included? He doesn't say everything like everybody else but maybe we need a full discussion."
When asked what he'd do if Israel was about to attack Iran, Newt Gingrich says he would ask Israel, "how can I help?"
Gingrich, Bachmann: Move embassy to Jerusalem
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57338890-503544/gingrich-bachmann-move-embassy-to-jerusalem/
Republican presidential frontrunner Newt Gingrich said Wednesday that as president he would move the U.S. embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, a proposal designed to appeal to American Jewish voters. It also escalated the jockeying among the GOP candidates to be viewed as the most pro-Israel choice.
Rival candidate Michele Bachmann, a House member from Minnesota, said on Wednesday that she too would insist on moving the embassy. Bachman and Gingrich were among six GOP candidates who spoke at the Republican Jewish Coalition's candidates' forum in Washington, D.C.
Jerusalem is the declared capital of Israel, but that fact is not internationally recognized because of the long-standing territorial disputes with the Palestinians.
Like other Republican candidates at the forum, Gingrich blasted the Obama administration's policy on Israel. The administration, he said, takes the position "it's always Israel's fault no matter how bad the other side is," and that "has to stop."
Gingrich also told the crowd that he would appoint former United Nations Representative John Bolton as his secretary of State.
Of moving the embassy, Bachmann said, "I already have secured a donor who said they will personally pay for the ambassador's home to be moved from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem."
She told the
audience, "Like you, my commitment is unequivocal and unchanging. We stand with
Israel."
Referring to the leader of Iran, Israel's mortal enemy, Bachmann said, "Millions
of Jews lost their lives. Today, a madman is speaking and once again it seems as
if the world isn't really listening."
In an interview, Alan Solow, a longtime Obama supporter and the former chair of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, defended the president's record on Israel and pointed to statements from Israeli officials saying the relationship between the United States and Israel is as strong as or even stronger than it's ever been.
He also accused the Republican presidential candidates of using catchphrases instead of proposing solutions to the problems in the Middle East. "They present no vision of their own," Solow said.
At Republican Jewish Coalition, GOP candidates take hard line on Mideast
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70033.html
Read more:
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70033.html#ixzz1ftuOnmUg
Newt Gingrich has been president for only two hours, but he’s already roiling the Middle East: He will — in those first two hours, he promised Wednesday — order the U.S. Embassy in Israel moved to Jerusalem.
Secretary of State John Bolton will handle the details.
If you thought the U.S. had a roller-coaster ride through the Middle East in the
wild days of the Arab Spring, just wait until the Republicans retake the White
House. In a series of addresses to the
Republican Jewish Coalition in Washington on
Tuesday, Republican presidential candidates laid out a series of specific and
deliberately provocative moves aimed at reasserting American strength and the
American alliance with Israel in a region whose stunning changes the Obama
administration has handled with extreme care and caution.
The candidates’ promises were real and symbolic, and often quite specific. On the hardest-line end, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum virtually promised military strikes on Iran.
Iran’s nuclear push “increasingly leaves only two options: a military strike or a nuclear Iran,” Perry said, indicating his preference for the former.
Gingrich took only a slightly softer line, promising to switch to a policy of “regime replacement” toward Tehran, and, specifically, that he would covertly (if, apparently, not secretly) sabotage the country’s main oil refinery.
“It’s better to stop them early than to stop them late,” he said.
But the other candidates offered an array of symbolic moves that also would set an entirely new tone toward a region in which Obama has sought to welcome new, fledgling Democratic regimes and to hope that flashes of Islamist leanings represent mere growing pains.
Moving the embassy — a perennial, and perenially unfilled campaign promise — was a popular one. Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann told the appreciative audience that she already had secured a pledge from a private donor to pay the moving expenses of the U.S. ambassador to Israel. Gingrich’s main rival at present, Mitt Romney, also offered to move the embassy, though he did not offer a timeline or payment scheme.
He did, however, open a new front on Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. President Romney would press, he said, to have the Iranian “indicted for the crime of incitement to genocide.”
Some candidates — notably Perry and Santorum — signaled a grim view that military conflict with Iran is likely. “I know people in this country are tired of war,” Santorum said, before making the case that a “long war” against Islamic extremism already is under way and must continue to be engaged.
A Romney surrogate, former Minnesota Sen. Norm Coleman, argued that a more confrontational stance toward Iran actually would represent a better chance for peace.
Romney would produce “compliance in the face of strength, which you’re not getting now,” said Coleman.
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