Hillary Clinton

Same old Clintons on national defense

Unfortunately, Senator Hillary Clinton has the same old habit as her spouse when it comes to our nation’s defense.

In October 2002, Hillary Cinton, along with 76 other United States Senators, voted to authorize the use of force against Saddam Hussein and his regime. To date, we have accomplished the one major stated purpose of the resolution by removing Saddam Hussein and his regime from power and continue to make progress towards its other objectives. Since then, she has sought to explain away her vote as a warning to Saddam Hussein. In addition, Senator Clinton has said she would and would not quickly withdraw our troops from Iraq if she becomes the 44th President of the United States. I don’t do mind reading so it is impossible for me to say whether she was actually for or against the invasion of Iraq and what she would do as President. Leadership, to me, is clearly saying what you will do, then doing it, and standing by your words.

In an editorial this morning, the New York Post reported this about former President William J. Clinton’s opinion of our inavsion of Iraq:

“We’ve got the power, we’ve got the juice. We should do the job,” he told students at the University of Florida in an April 2003 speech.

Later that month, Clinton declared in St. Louis: “Saddam is gone and good riddance” — adding: “Bush has done the right thing in removing Saddam Hussein from power.”

And just days after Bush’s controversial State of the Union Address that year, Clinton said: “It is incontestable that on the day I left office, there were unaccounted-for stocks of biological and chemical weapons.”

What’s more, Bill Clinton made a direct link between 9/11 and Iraq: In a 2004 Time interview, the former president stressed that because of 9/11, Bush had an obligation to move against Saddam: “That’s why I supported the Iraq thing,” he said. “There was a lot of [weapons] stuff unaccounted for … When you’re the president, and your country has just been through what we had, you want everything to be accounted for.”

Now, he says he was against the invasion of Iraq when he was publicly saying he was for it:

Clinton’s aides now insist that he really did oppose the war — his public statements notwithstanding — but considered it inappropriate to publicly go against a sitting president.

That President is still in office so what has changed?

Answer: The Clintons’ rhetoric and one of them is running to become the next President of the United States.

While he was in office, I could not tell what the last President Clinton would do against America’s avowed enemies. He says, “I tried,” yet, in my opinion, he did far too little about both Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden.

If that is the experience his spouse is touting as what makes her qualified, then I say it was bad experience and severely detracts from Senator Clinton’s qualifications to be President.

People should say what they mean, do what they say, and only start the fights they intend to finish.

Spineless politicians who will not defend our borders

Before Governor Spitzer scratched his plan to let illegal aliens get New York licenses, Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) said, “I broadly support what governors like Eliot Spitzer are trying to do.”

Some might say the campaign ad below by Congressman Tom Tancredo is controversial yet syndicated talk-radio host Mark Levin pegged it correctly last night when he said, “It is a mini documentary of what has already occurred in this country.”

The following is an excerpt from the appendix to the 9/11 Commission’s Staff Monograph on 9/11 and Terrorist Travel:

Mohamed Atta’s revised immigration arrival record (I-94) created on May 2, 2001 at the Miami INS district office. Atta had gone to the office seeking a length of stay equal to the 8-months he received for a colleague — possibly Ziad Jarrah. Tourists were not normally granted a length of stay of more than 6 months. The INS officer in Miami refused to grant 8 months to Jarrah and instead rolled-back Atta’s length of stay to the standard six months, until July 9, 2001 [emphasis added mine].

Later that day, Mohamed Atta used that rolled back visa to obtain a Florida drivers license with an expiration date of September 1, 2007. Click on the image below and see the evidence or click here and read the monograph yourself [pdf reader required].

Senator Clinton and Governor Spitzer meet Mohamed Atta

Yesterday, in Albany’s Times-Union:

Assembly Republican Minority Leader Jim Tedisco, for instance, told WROW-AM in an early morning talk show that he’s still concerned about the roughly 23,000 aliens who since September received licenses without the previously affixed labels showing when their visas expired. That was the first and possibly only substantive change that was enacted after Spitzer in September announced his plan through administrative fiat.

Some think Senator Clinton flip-flopped yesterday yet this old soldier can still spot a poorly executed about-face:

“As president, I will not support driver’s licenses for undocumented people…” — Senator Hillary Clinton

Too late, Senator Clinton; you said what you meant the first time.