WASHINGTON – President Obama, defending his foreign policy record at a time of anti-American rage in the Muslim world, fired back at suggestions from Republican Mitt Romney that the president has been weak with allies and enemies alike.
In an interview airing the night before Obama meets with other world leaders at the United Nations, the president said, If Gov. Romney is suggesting that we should start another war, he should say so.
It was Obamas most direct rebuttal yet to persistent skepticism by his White House rival on his handling of an unraveling situation in the Middle East. Romney has charged the U.S. stance has been marred by miscalculations, mixed messages and appeasement.
As far back as May, Romney was condemning Obamas response to unrest in Syria, dubbing it a policy of paralysis and calling for more assertive measures, such as arming the opposition to Syrian President Bashar Assad. As deadly anti-American protests erupted earlier this month in Libya and elsewhere, Romney sought to undercut what polling shows is a significant foreign policy edge for Obama by calling the presidents handling of the situation disgraceful and decrying a lack of U.S. leadership in the region.
In a companion interview to Obamas appearance on CBS 60 Minutes, Romney broadened his reproach to include Israel, criticizing Obamas failure to meet with the U.S. allys head of state, Benjamin Netanyahu, during the annual U.N. gathering. Romney called it a mistake that sends a message throughout the Middle East that somehow we distance ourselves from our friends.
The White House has said scheduling precluded a meeting between the two leaders, who wont be in New York at the same time. With the final six weeks of a hard-fought election hanging over the U.N. summit, Obama has opted out of face-to-face meetings with any of his counterparts – not just Netanyahu – during his compressed U.N. visit.
But Obama pushed back on the notion that he feels pressure from Netanyahu, dismissing as noise the Israeli leaders calls for the U.S. to lay out a red line that Irans nuclear program mustnt cross to avoid American military intervention.
When it comes to our national security decisions, any pressure that I feel is simply to do whats right for the American people, Obama said. And I am going to block out any noise thats out there.
The interviews also offered glimpses into both candidates personal habits, including their late-night routines. Romney said his nightly prayer is a time to connect both with the divine and with his own thoughts, and he said he asks God mainly for wisdom and understanding.
Obama said he hunkers down for reading, writing and occasionally a moment alone on the Truman Balcony, with the Washington Monument and Jefferson Memorial in view.