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Romney Campaign Press Release - An Open Letter to President Obama: President Obama's Comments Raise Even More Questions About a Possible Second Term

March 27, 2012

"We live in a dangerous world. American strength and American constancy are critical to the preservation of peace. Too often, the United States under your leadership has been neither strong nor constant. Your inadvertently recorded remarks to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in South Korea raise questions about whether a new period of even greater weakness and inconstancy would lie ahead if you are reelected." — Romney Foreign Policy Advisers

An Open Letter To President Obama Regarding "Flexibility"

Romney Foreign Policy Advisers

National Review Online

March 27, 2012

www.NationalReview.com

Dear Mr. President,

We live in a dangerous world. American strength and American constancy are critical to the preservation of peace. Too often, the United States under your leadership has been neither strong nor constant. Your inadvertently recorded remarks to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in South Korea raise questions about whether a new period of even greater weakness and inconstancy would lie ahead if you are reelected.

Here is a transcript of the exchange, which leads us to a number of important questions that demand answers:

President Obama: On all these issues, but particularly missile defense, this, this can be solved but it's important for him to give me space.

President Medvedev: Yeah, I understand. I understand your message about space. Space for you...

President Obama: This is my last election. After my election I have more flexibility.

President Medvedev: I understand. I will transmit this information to Vladimir.

What do you mean by "flexibility?" Flexibility to do what?

In addition to these broad questions, your words to President Medvedev raise more specific questions on a range of issues.

Missile Defense: Your administration has cut our missile defense budget, linked the New START treaty to our missile defense capabilities, and abandoned plans for missile defense sites in Poland and the Czech Republic without extracting concessions from Russia. Should the American people expect more efforts to placate Russia by weakening the missile defense systems that protect us and our allies?

Iranian Nuclear Weapons: In your speech to AIPAC, you said you "don't bluff" when it comes to the Iranian threat. But your administration has delayed and opposed crippling sanctions in its first three years, repeatedly talked down the effectiveness and advisability of the military option, and openly discouraged Israel from acting in its own self-defense. Would post-election "flexibility" lead you to revive your "no preconditions" engagement policy with the Iranian regime?

Israeli-Palestinian Dispute: According to the Palestinian foreign minister, your administration told the Palestinian Authority to wait until the election is over for further action on the Israeli-Palestinian dispute. Over three years you have pressured the Israelis to grant one-sided concessions to the Palestinians, demanded that Israel accept the 1967 lines as the starting point for negotiations, and lobbied Congress to restore U.S. taxpayer funding to a United Nations body that has recognized a Palestinian state. Will post-election "flexibility" lead you to undermine Israel further?

Iraq and Afghanistan: Contrary to the recommendations of your military commanders, you withdrew American forces from Iraq without leaving an appropriate training force behind. And contrary to the recommendations of your military commanders, you have begun to draw down American forces in Afghanistan according to a politically driven timetable that makes no strategic sense. Stability in both countries is now at greater risk. If you are reelected, would "flexibility" lead you to abandon completely American commitments, notwithstanding the enormous sacrifices American forces have made, and with little regard for our national security?

The Castros and Chavez: Your administration has relaxed sanctions on the brutal Castro regime in Cuba and has done little to counter the growing influence of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez throughout Latin America. Would post-election "flexibility" lead you to take an even softer line toward these authoritarian regimes?

Defense Budget: Your administration has proposed cutting $487 billion from the defense budget over 10 years and supports a budget process that may bring that number up to nearly $1 trillion. While spending explodes elsewhere in the budget, would post-election "flexibility" lead you to impose even deeper cuts that will cripple our military?

In a democracy, no issues are more important than those pertaining to national security. The American people deserve full and frank answers to these questions, or at least the same level of candor you have offered to Russia's leaders.

Sincerely,

Grant Aldonas

Leon Aron

Cofer Black

John Bolton

Christopher Burnham

Eliot Cohen

Norm Coleman

Paula Dobriansky

Eric Edelman

Aaron Friedberg

Nile Gardiner

Kerry Healey

Kim Holmes

Robert Joseph

Robert Kagan

John Lehman

Kent Lucken

Mary Beth Long

William Martel

Tibor Nagy

Andrew Natsios

Robert O'Brien

Meghan O'Sullivan

Walid Phares

Stephen Rademaker

Mitchell Reiss

Daniel Runde

Daniel Senor

James Shinn

Kristen Silverberg

Clifford Sobel

Jim Talent

Ray Walser

Richard Williamson

Dov Zakheim

Roger Zakheim

Mitt Romney, Romney Campaign Press Release - An Open Letter to President Obama: President Obama's Comments Raise Even More Questions About a Possible Second Term Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/300696

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