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    22
    Mar
    2013
    2:46pm, EDT

    Chuck Todd answers your questions on everything from Obama in Israel to Miami hoops

    Chuck Todd, NBC’s incorrigible political director, took time out of his day following President Obama on his Mideast trip to answer questions from his legions of Twitter followers. The conversation ranged from his take on Obama’s relationship with Netanyahu to the the particulars of 2014 Senate races and University of Miami athletics (he’s a fan if you haven’t heard). Here are some highlights from the wide-ranging conversation:

     

    8 comments

    xoxo

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    Explore related topics: mideast, israel, senate, miami, ncaa, obama, 2014, press, netanyahu, 2016, chuck-todd
  • 22
    Mar
    2013
    10:12am, EDT

    #ChuckToddQuestions: Ask NBC's White House Correspondent about Obama, NCAA brackets and more at 10:30am ET on Twitter

    President Barack Obama wraps the first foreign trip of his second term Friday with stops in Israel and Jordan before returning to the U.S. 

    After spending time with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and giving a speech to Israeli youths Thursday, Obama is finishing his trip Friday with a visit to Amman, Jordan and a meeting with King Abdullah II.

    Chuck Todd, NBC News’ Chief White House Correspondent and anchor of MSNBC’s “Daily Rundown,” has been traveling with the president and will take to Twitter this morning to answer questions about the trip.

    And in the spirit of March Madness, he’ll dish on NCAA basketball brackets as well. (Chuck has his Miami Hurricanes taking the title). 

    To join the conversation on Twitter, tweet your question for Chuck (@chucktodd) using the hashtag #ChuckToddQuestions. He’ll be answering until 11:30 a.m. ET.

    Related links: 

    Obama visits a Bethlehem in midst of change, Islamization

    Obama appeals to Israelis: Give justice to the Palestinians

    Iran threatens to destroy Tel Aviv, Haifa if Israel attacks

    Obama: 'Still time' for diplomatic solution to Iran nuke dispute

    90 comments

    I wonder why Chuckie T. thought it was necessary to point out the President looked "tired" last night on NBC Nightly News? Chuck should stick to his number crunching and leave reading body language to the experts... I'm tired of his snarky little digs at President Obama!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: israel, palestinians, jordan, abbas, obama, netanyahu, chuck-todd
  • 20
    Nov
    2012
    12:56pm, EST

    Obama calls Egyptian president third time in 24 hours

    NBC's Domenico Montanaro reports on what the continued fighting in Gaza could mean politically for President Obama, U.S. foreign policy, and the balance of power in the Middle East.

    By NBC's Shawna Thomas
    Follow @ShawnaNBCNews

     

    YAKOTA AFB, Japan — President Barack Obama spoke with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi for the third time in a 24-hour period while flying back from a trip to southeast Asia aboard Air Force One.

    Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes said the call was to continue the discussions both presidents have had about Egypt's ability to help end the rocket-fire in Gaza. 

    "He also underscored that President Morsi's efforts reinforce the important role that President Morsi and Egypt play on behalf of regional security and the pursuit of broader peace between the Palestinians and Israelis," Rhodes said of the call, which occurred en route a refueling stop in Japan following Obama's three-day trip overseas.

    Recommended: Vote in 'urban areas' up, but doesn't fully explain election outcome

    This call comes as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton makes her way to the region to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, along with Palestinian and Egyptian leaders. It is unclear about whether she will sit down with Morsi while in the Middle East.

    Rhodes said the president has made clear that the primary objective at this moment is the deescalation of violence, and commended Morsi for sharing that goal.

    "Without an end to rocket fire into Israel from Gaza, Israel can't be assured of the security of its people," Rhodes said.

    The president believes the "preferred outcome" of all of the leaders involved is an end to the loss of life in the region.

    315 comments

    Oh dear, the President is once again acting in a rational manner. How disturbing.

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    Explore related topics: egypt, israel, white-house, barack-obama, foreign-policy
  • 16
    Sep
    2012
    10:02am, EDT

    Israeli PM tries to strike more neutral pose in U.S. election

    Friction mounts as Israel asks that U.S. give Iran an ultimatum; a tricky position for Obama, whose foreign policy has been lauded. NBC's Andrea Mitchell and CNBC's John Harwood report.

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sought Sunday to assume a more neutral posture toward the American presidential election, distancing himself from Mitt Romney's suggestion that President Barack Obama has thrown Israel "under the bus."

    The Israeli prime minister, appearing Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," downplayed longstanding indications of pressure between himself and Obama and urged more bipartisanship from Americans in support of the Jewish state. Netanyahu told moderator David Gregory that his primary concern was preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons, not influencing the outcome of the U.S. presidential election. 

    To that end, Netanyahu said that Romney's accusation about Obama having essentially abandoned Israel on the world stage was "simply not the case and simply not my position."

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu discusses violence against Americans in the Middle East with NBC's David Gregory.

    "There's no bus, and we're not going to get into that discussion," Netanyahu said of Romney's charge, which the GOP presidential nominee first made in May of 2011 following a speech by the president calling on Israel to return to pre-1967 border lines as part of peace negotiations with Palestinians. 

    Romney has used Israel to distinguish himself most sharply from Obama in the arena of foreign policy. The Republican nominee visited Israel during a stop on his trip abroad this summer, and is generally seen as more sympathetic to Israel's hawkish stance toward Iran. 

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during his press conference with the Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem, Israel, on 02 February 2010.

    Moreover, the relationship between Obama and Netanyahu is generally regarded as tense, a charge which the Israeli prime minister rejected. 

    "I'm always pleased and happy to have a conversation with President Obama," said Netanyahu, downplaying reports that Obama had allegedly sought to avoid meeting with the prime minister during the upcoming U.N. General Assembly in New York. "We've had our discussions; our schedules on this visit didn't work out … but we continue to be in close consultations."

    David Gregory analyzes a special hour of Meet the Press featuring interviews with US Ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice; and Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.

    For all of Netanyahu's pleas, though, he has become a central figure in the U.S. presidential election. Romney seized upon the alleged snub during a fundraiser in New York on Friday. 

    "I thought the president's decision not to meet with Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu was an extraordinary confusing and troubling decision," said Romney, whose relationship with Netanyahu dates back to their shared days at Boston Consulting Group. "I don't know what the president is trying to send to the world in terms of a message but it does send a message. It sends a message not just to Israel but to the other nations throughout the Middle East."

    A Meet the Press roundtable discusses recent upheaval in the Middle East and how the United States intends to respond.

    Netanyahu himself argued his agitations toward Iran weren't meant to coincide with the American election. 

    "What's guiding my statements is not the American political calendar but the Iranian nuclear calendar," he said. "It's really not a partisan political issue."

    The political fighting over Israel plays out against a broader backdrop in which Iran is reportedly advancing in its development of a nuclear weapon; the U.S. also suffered four casualties — including Ambassador Christopher Stevens — this week in Libya after protesters stormed a U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi. Other embassies suffered turmoil, and the State Department on Saturday ordered family and non-emergency personnel evacuated from posts in Sudan and Tunisia. 

    Those developments have injected foreign policy into the center of the U.S. presidential election as Obama tries to quell protests against American embassies related to an amateur video mocking Islam. After the attack in Benghazi, Romney controversially pounced and suggested the administration's condemnation of the video was tantamount to "an apology for America’s values."

    Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, also appearing Sunday on "Meet the Press," termed that accusation a "vacuous charge of weakness."

    "I think the American people welcome strong, steady unified leadership — bipartisan in times of challenge," she said.

    863 comments

    It's really very simple. The president of the United States, whoever he or she might be, is duty bound to place the interests of the United States ahead of the interests of any other country.

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  • 29
    Jul
    2012
    10:53am, EDT

    Mitt Romney visits Western Wall, one of holiest sites in Judaism

    Speaking in Jerusalem, Mitt Romney says that preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons "must be our highest national security priority." Watch his entire speech.

    By Garrett Haake, NBC News

    JERUSALEM - Mitt Romney made an unannounced trip to one of the holiest sites in Judaism, the Western Wall, on Sunday, as the presumptive GOP nominee continued his week-long overseas trip.

    Romney, joined by his wife, Ann, and son Josh, along with a bevy of aides, was escorted by American and Israeli security through a throng of well-wishers, press and worshippers gathered at the wall on Tisha B'av, considered the saddest day on the Jewish calendar.


    Several top Romney donors were also seen at the wall, escorted by aides. A contingent of Romney donors have traveled here for a Monday fundraiser at a Jerusalem hotel.

    Romney was shown a diagram of the second Temple, of which the wall is the only remnant.  The destruction of the second Temple by Roman forces nearly 2000 years ago is one of the events mourned on this day, contributing to big crowds gathered there Sunday.

    The Rabbi of the Western Wall read Romney a passage, and Romney placed his hand on the wall and appeared to pray. Ann Romney prayed at a separate section of the wall reserved for women. In keeping with tradition, both Mitt and Ann Romney wrote personal messages or prayers on pieces of paper and tucked them into cracks in the wall. An aide said it would not be appropriate to disclose what the couple wrote.

    Mitt Romney would 'respect' Israel strike on Iran, aide says

    As the Romneys left the wall amidst a crowd of people, Mitt Romney reached out and shook hands with supporters, and many Israelis shouted political messages at him as he passed.

    “Mitt Romney! God will make you president because you came to Israel!” one man shouted.

    Jason Reed / Reuters

    U.S. Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney visits the Western Wall, Judaism's holiest prayer site, during prayers marking Tisha B'Av in Jerusalem's Old City, Sunday.

    "Free Jonathan Pollard," shouted several other men, referring to an American citizen convicted of spying for Israel, whose case has caused some friction between the two closely allied nations.

    Earlier in the day, Romney met with Israeli leaders including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli president Shimon Peres. On Sunday night, Romney is due to deliver a speech on the importance of the American-Israeli alliance from Jerusalem, where he will be introduced by the city's mayor.

    Romney looks for political lift in Israel after London miscues

    Romney aides said the speech would focus heavily on the importance of the alliance, and the shared values that undergird it.

    Excerpts released by the campaign indicate it would also address anxieties over the dangers posed to Israel and the world by a nuclear-armed Iran, which a Romney adviser earlier said was an "existential threat" to Israel, adding that a Romney administration would "respect" a unilateral Israeli effort to eliminate Iran's nuclear program if sanctions and other peaceful options failed.

    "Today, the regime in Iran is five years closer to developing nuclear weapons capability," Romney was expected to say in his remarks. "Preventing that outcome must be our highest national security priority."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Military drafted in to fill empty seats at London Olympics
    • Mitt Romney would 'respect' Israel strike on Iran, aide says
    • 2 US climbers found dead on Peruvian peak
    • Elephants slaughtered, orphan found in latest Africa poaching
    • 'Heavy skirmishing' reported in Syria's biggest city
    • Chinese pollution protesters turn violent in clash with police
    • Syria regime 'reeling, armed to the teeth' with chemical weapons

    News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    729 comments

    Willard has now moved onto Israel to pick their pockets clean! An aide said it would not be appropriate to disclose what the couple wrote It read; Remember... it's OUR turn! Love, Willard & Annie!

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  • 29
    Jul
    2012
    6:16am, EDT

    Mitt Romney would 'respect' Israel strike on Iran, aide says

    Jason Reed / Reuters

    U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney meets Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem, Sunday.

    By Garrett Haake, NBC News, and wire reports

    JERUSALEM - Mitt Romney would “respect” Israel's use of military force to stop Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, a senior aide said on Sunday as the Republican presidential candidate began his visit to Jerusalem.

    "If Israel has to take action on its own, in order to stop Iran from developing that capability, the governor would respect that decision," Romney's senior national security aide Dan Senor told reporters traveling with the candidate.


    While stopping short of endorsing a preemptive military attack, the comment seemed to differ with President Barack Obama's attempts to convince Israel to avoid any such move.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Gov. Romney’s first meeting was Israel's Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, who greeted him as a “personal friend and friend of Israel.”

    Shaking hands underneath U.S. and Israel flags, the pair signaled that Iran would be top of the agenda in their discussions.

    Netanyahu said: "We have to be honest and say that all the sanctions and diplomacy so far have not set back the Iranian program by one iota. And that's why I believe that we need a strong and credible military threat coupled with the sanctions to have a chance to change that situation."

    Later, Gov. Romney and his wife Ann visited the city's Western Wall.

    Sunday’s comments came as a senior Israeli official denied a newspaper report that President Barack Obama's national security adviser had briefed Netanyahu on a U.S. contingency plan to attack Iran should diplomacy fail to curb its nuclear program.

    The Israeli liberal Haaretz daily on Sunday quoted an unnamed U.S. official as saying the adviser, Thomas Donilon, had described the plan over dinner with Netanyahu earlier this month.

    "Nothing in the article is correct. Donilon did not meet the prime minister for dinner, he did not meet him one-on-one, nor did he present operational plans to attack Iran," the senior official, who declined to be named given the sensitivity of the issue, told Reuters.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Elephants slaughtered, orphan found in latest Africa poaching
    • London protesters decry 'Corporate Olympics'
    • 'Heavy skirmishing' reported in Syria's biggest city
    • In shadow of the Games, London celebrates
    • Chinese pollution protesters turn violent in clash with police
    • Syria regime 'reeling, armed to the teeth' with chemical weapons

    News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    2026 comments

    Why is this a surprise, just proves that after 12 years of wars there is yet another war monger that never joined the service and avoided the draft 5 times, but does not mind sending other people into war so he can have some more private contracts and collect billions more.

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    Explore related topics: israel, middle-east, politics, mitt-romney, decision-2012, garrett-haake
  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    5:35pm, EDT

    Romney sets stage for foreign trip with Obama criticism

    By NBC's Michael O'Brien and Garrett Haake
    Follow @mpoindc Follow @GarrettNBCNews

     

    Mitt Romney set the stage for his impending foreign policy tour with a speech leveling sharp criticism of President Barack Obama, accusing his administration of having weakened America's standing on the international stage.

    In a speech before the Veterans of Foreign Wars national convention, the presumptive Republican nominee accused the administration of leaking classified intelligence information for political reasons, and demanded that automatic defense cuts included in last summer's debt ceiling agreement be undone before taking effect in 2013.

    The former Massachusetts governor's alternative, he said, would amount to an "American Century" in which the U.S. wouldn't flinch from a leading international role.

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speaks during the 113th National Convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars on July 24 in Reno, Nevada.

    "This is very simple: if you do not want America to be the strongest nation on earth, I am not your President. You have that President today," Romney told VFW members gathered in Reno, NV.

    The speech was Romney's last official event in the U.S. before embarking on a key journey abroad intended to bolster his foreign policy credentials versus Obama. The trip will take Romney to the United Kingdom, as well as two other nations he name-checked in the speech, Israel and Poland.

    Tuesday's speech, along with the trip, comes amid new data in the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll that shows Obama with a 10-point advantage over Romney on the question of which candidate would serve as a better commander-in-chief.

    To that end, Romney sought to weaken Obama's standing on national security issues by highlighting the recent controversy over leaks of classified information - including details of the raid that killed Osama Bin Laden and covert subterfuge meant to slow Iran's nuclear progress - that many Republicans believe were orchestrated by the White House for political gain.

    "This conduct is contemptible. It betrays our national interest. It compromises our men and women in the field." Romney said."Whoever provided classified information to the media, seeking political advantage for the administration, must be exposed, dismissed, and punished.  The time for stonewalling is over."

    Romney also attacked the planned cuts to the defense budget agreed to in a bipartisan debt deal as "wholesale reductions in the nation’s military capacity," and laid full blame at the president's feet. He also linked the cuts to care for veterans - the singular issue in which many in the crowd said they felt the greatest personal investment.

    "Mark my words: These cuts would only weaken an already stretched VA system and our solemn commitment that every veteran receives care second to none," Romney said. "If I am president of the United States I will not let that happen."

    Romney opposed the deal that congressional Republicans struck with the White House to raise the debt ceiling, though the former Massachusetts governor hasn't specified how else he would have structured such an agreement.

    Romney name-dropped two nations that he will visit on his foreign tour, beginning tomorrow, as part of his attack on President Obama by accusing the president of "abandonment" in the case of Poland, which had planned missile defense sites pulled, and of "shabby treatment of one of our finest friends" in Obama's treatment of Israel.

    Also notable was what Romney did not say in this major address. He never mentioned Al Qaeda and made only passing reference to Iraq. Two new policy details, flagged by aides to his campaign, were buried in a speech heavier on red rhetorical meat than policy details.

    In a fact sheet released during the speech, the Romney campaign called for all future military aid to Egypt to be tied to that nation's upholding of a peace agreement with Israel, and future civilian aid would be linked to good governance measures.

    On the prospect of a nuclear Iran, of which Romney said there is "no greater danger in the world today" he pledged yet again to employ "every means necessary to protect ourselves and the region" from the dangers of a nuclear Iran. The fact sheet released by the campaign made clear that this included making sure any negotiated agreement with Iran ascribe to the international "redline" on nuclear enrichment -- that no deal would be considered without Iran fully halting its enrichment activity.

    69 comments

    Hope Willard loses his passport! I listened to the entire speech, it was heavy on heated rhetoric, reminded me of old McCain & his little Bomb...bomb...bomb...Iran diddy! *yawn* If you want endless war, then Willard is YOUR guy! Telling an audience how much you love America 24 x's makes one wond …

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, israel, poland, mitt-romney, barack-obama, united-kingdom, foreign-policy, first-read, decision-2012, appfeatured
  • 21
    Jul
    2012
    11:42am, EDT

    Risk and reward await Romney on foreign trip

    By NBC's Garrett Haake
    Follow @GarrettNBCNews

     

    BOSTON — An impending overseas trip lasting six days provides Mitt Romney with the opportunity to highlight his foreign policy bonafides, but is also fraught with challenges for the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, reflecting the delicate nature of international diplomacy. 

    Romney will set off on Wednesday for his first foreign trip since clinching the Republican nomination for president, a high-profile journey meant to highlight his differences with President Barack Obama.  But the Romney campaign says it would leave politics at the water's edge; the Republican candidate would not explicitly criticize Obama on policy while abroad.

    Still, the trip, which will take Romney to three steadfast American allies: the United Kingdom, Israel and Poland, is meant to be as much of a learning experience as a political exercise.

    "This trip is really an opportunity for the governor to learn and listen," Lanhee Chen, the campaign's policy director told reporters on a conference call this week. "There are a number of different challenges that the world faces today, and its an opportunity for him to visit three countries that have a strong and important relationship with the United States."

    Romney will arrive in London on Wednesday for a series of meetings with British officials — including Prime Minister David Cameron, as well as former government officials like Tony Blair.

    British leaders are mentioned frequently by Romney on the campaign trail; the Republican is fond of referencing a conversation he claims to have had with one of the former prime ministers, who privately stressed to Romney the importance of American strength on the world stage.

    Romney also plans to attend the opening ceremonies of the 2012 Olympic Games, which are being held in London. Romney helmed the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City, and has been a vocal supporter of the Olympic movement since that time. The campaign hopes the stop will highlight Romney's successful tenure as CEO of the Salt Lake Olympic Committee, widely seen as one of Romney's strongest personal credentials. The candidate and his wife, Ann, are also expected to attend at least one Olympic event when the games officially open; the Romney family has a personal stake in one of the contests — a horse they own qualified for the American team in the sport of dressage.

    From London, Romney will travel to Israel, where he'll meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whom Romney knows personally from the two men's overlapping tenure at Boston Consulting Group decades ago. Romney will also meet with Palestinian leader Salam Fayyad and will receive a briefing from the U.S. Ambassador to Israel, Daniel Shapiro. Additionally, Romney is expected to give at least one public speech in Jerusalem.

    Obama's handling of Israel provides one of the sharpest areas of contrast between Romney and Obama. Romney had said over a year ago that the president threw Israel "under the bus" for his support for certain preconditions to a Middle East peace process.

    Romney will conclude his trip with a two day stop in Poland, where the campaign was invited to visit by former president Lech Walesa. Romney will meet with Polish leadership, and tour sites of "historical significance" around the country, according to campaign advisers.

    CHALLENGES
    But the trip is fraught with a number of potential challenges and pitfalls for the presumptive GOP nominee. His campaign-trail rhetoric must take a back seat on the international stage, where American policy and rhetoric is more nuanced, and relationships with allies are delicately balanced across a spectrum of national interests.

    In England, where Romney is expected to be focused primarily on the Olympics, the candidate may be tested on two issues of significant importance to the British people: Afghanistan, and austerity.

    The UK has been one of the most steadfast American partners in Afghanistan since the invasion of the country in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. The UK has suffered 422 casualties in the decade since, and continued British involvement has grown unpopular over time. 

    Obama's decision to set a timetable to withdraw from Afghanistan prompted sharp criticism from Romney, who has said he finds "disturbing" what he calls a lack of mission clarity in Afghanistan. But the presumptive Republican nominee has yet to detail how exactly he would differ from Obama's policy there, beyond suggesting he would heed military leaders' advice more carefully.

    Domestically, Britain's struggle to enact austerity measures could prove thorny for Romney, who  has advocated similar deep and broad spending cuts in the U.S. government spending to the ones sought by Cameron's Conservative government. 

    Romney's trip to Israel presents another set of challenges for the Republican, who most strike the balance between its criticism of the president and upsetting a delicate political situation in which the United States maintains a large stake. In addition to claiming the Obama administration has thrown Israel "under the bus," Romney has said the best course of action for the United States may be to "do the opposite" of what Obama has done in three years as president.

    Martin Indyk, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel in the Clinton administration and head of the foreign policy program at the Brookings institution, said that Romney may have an opportunity to gain favor with an "emotional embrace" of Israel, but will likely find little success if he were to criticize Obama's record of security assistance for Israel while in country. (The Romney campaign says that doing that would be highly unlikely.)

    "On the one hand, [President Obama has] done everything possible for their security," Indyk explained of the president's hot-and-cold relationship with Israel and her leaders. "But what they really want is his love."

    Israelis have been "spoiled," Indyk said in an interview with NBC News, by the last two US presidents, who both "showered affection on Israel," and have taken offense at the fact that Obama has not visited their country as president. But, Indyk argued, on the issues of paramount importance to Israelis — security and preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon — Obama's record is "impeccable."

    While in Israel, Romney may also be pressed to provide more detail on his policy towards Syria, Israel's northern neighbor, which is now plagued by horrific daily violence and teetering on all-out civil war. Romney has suggested that the US take "whatever action we can" to help remove dictator Bashar Assad from power there, but Russia's role in that conflict may prove difficult for Romney to navigate in both Israel and Poland.

    Russia is blocking increased international sanctions against Syria, but has joined in the U.S.-led coalition opposing the development of Iran's nuclear program. Indyk said that Israelis aren't keen on antagonizing Russians, since fears of an Iranian nuclear weapon are the most important issue to Israelis at the moment. 

    And if any nation knows the challenges of dealing with Russia, a country Romney once referred to as the United States' "number one geopolitical foe," it is Poland, which suffered for decades under the Iron Curtain, and will be Romney's final stop on his foreign trip. While criticism of Russia may not play well in Israel, it may be welcome in Poland, a nation that has been cool towards the Obama administration since the president scrapped plans for a missile defense site in that country in 2009. 

    CRITICISM
    The Obama campaign has been quick to undermine and criticize Romney's planned foreign trip as a pale imitation of then-Sen. Obama's own foreign trip as presumptive Democratic nominee in 2008.

    Indeed, the Obama foreign trip included stops in Western Europe and Israel — but also a stop in Jordan, an Arab nation, as well as in both active warzones in Iraq and Afghanistan. While Romney has visited US forces in both Iraq and Afghanistan in the past, and has traveled to the UAE, Jordan and Kuwait in previous trips, his decision to not include any such stop this time has drawn preemptive criticism.

    "Obviously there are time constraints on any travel he does, particularly overseas, and we just have to make selections about where we want to focus and factor in countries he has traveled to before and this is a schedule we settled on," Dan Senor, a foreign policy adviser to the campaign told reporters last week.

    The Obama team has also tried to paint Romney's trip as a photos-and-fundraising exercise, pointing to substantive policy pronouncements from then-candidate Obama on his own foreign trip, and making note of Romney's reported high-dollar fundraisers in both London and Jerusalem.

    The Romney campaign says any new foreign policy specifics will come in a speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in Reno the day before the trip begins, and highlights the candidate's desire to "listen and learn" on his one foreign trip this campaign cycle.

    OPPORTUNITY
    But the trip is not also without opportunities for the Romney campaign. As a former governor, albeit one with extensive business experience in foreign countries, Romney has little first-hand foreign policy experience. By demonstrating fluency with complex international issues and a deft touch with some of the United States' most important allies, Romney can reassure skeptics he would be a competent commander in chief. 

    The Israel trip in particular also holds electoral promise for the Romney campaign.

    "It can make a difference," said Indyk, the former ambassador, of a successful Romney trip to Israel. "If Romney convinces enough Jewish voters that he's going to be better than Obama it might help him win places like Florida."

    Then there is, as always, the value of political theater. Can Romney look the part of commander-in-chief as he visits, as a private citizen, with top American allies?

    "This trip demonstrates Governor Romney's belief in the worth and necessity of standing with our allies and locking arms with our allies, and that indeed is the common theme binding the United Kingdom, Israel and Poland," Chen, Romney's policy director, explained. "Each nation shares our love of liberty as well as the fortitude to defend it."

    1275 comments

    He's just going to check his offshore accounts. lol !

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    Explore related topics: russia, israel, poland, mitt-romney, barack-obama, united-kingdom, foreign-policy, first-read, decision-2012, romney-embed
  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    9:04pm, EDT

    With Florida retirees, playful Obama brushes off tough campaign

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg

    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – Speaking to a boisterous crowd at a retirement community here, President Obama played the seasoned campaign veteran, unbowed by his opponent Mitt Romney’s negative ads even as the two trade barbs over each other's records and rhetoric.

    “Frankly, I'd be worried if this were my first campaign. But I've been to this rodeo before,” Obama told a crowd of 675 at the Century Village retirement community on Thursday.

    He joked that the crowd should just mute the negative TV ads inundating this crucial swing state, and acknowledged that their visual impact wouldn’t be too appealing either. 


    “Some of the pictures of me will be unflattering. Now, my face is all distorted, one eye's all droopy,” he said, imitating what some of the images in the ads would look like. “Right? I'm looking all grim,” he continued as the crowd roared with laughter.

    The group of seniors and their family members, packed into a low-ceilinged clubhouse, was particularly rowdy, frequently shouting words of encouragement over the president and breaking into chants of “four more years!” whenever he paused.

    The president seemed to feed off the crowd, especially after he made his way to the podium having waded through a crowd of senior women who were particularly excited to see him.

    “That’s the most kisses I’ve gotten at any campaign event!” he said as he reached the stage.

    Later, as an audience member’s phone rang, the president joked that it was his wife Michelle calling because she heard he was getting so much affection at the event. 

    Obama tailored his speech to fit this crowd, hitting similar notes as he did earlier at an event in Jacksonville - criticizing Romney’s plans for Medicare (he says Romney’s changes would cost seniors up to $6,400 more) but also appealing to the group’s strong support for Israel.

    He condemned the “barbaric” terrorist attack in Bulgaria that killed five Israelis.

    “I know a lot of people in this community care about the state of Israel. And we are heartbroken,” he said of the bombing.

    He added that the rapid changes in the Middle East and the bloodshed in Syria meant that “now's the time to make sure we're doing everything we can to protect Israel's security.”

    The president continues his campaign swing through Florida Friday with stops in Fort Myers and Orlando.

    606 comments

    Love him or hate him (and there is no in between), you gotta admit, he knows how to do this...

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    Explore related topics: israel, florida, syria, aging, barack-obama, retirement, bulgaria, first-read, decision-2012, ali-weinberg
  • 2
    Jul
    2012
    4:41pm, EDT

    Romney to travel to Israel

    By NBC's Garrett Haake

    Mitt Romney will travel to Israel this summer on a leg of a foreign trip for the presumptive Republican presidential nominee before the height of the fall campaign season.

    The Romney campaign confirmed a New York Times report on a long-suspected trip by Romney to Israel. While the exact timing of the trip is unclear, a previous campaign aide told NBC News that it's likely that he'll travel to Israel from London, where the GOP nominee will head at the end of this month for the opening of the Summer Olympics.

    Romney's approach toward Israel has been one of the main areas in which he's distinguished himself from President Obama on foreign policy issues. Romney had previously accused Obama of having thrown Israel "under the bus" for outlining preconditions of a peace process. Romney's also been hawkish toward the prospect of an Iranian nuclear program, a major concern of the Israeli government.

    Arizona Sen. John McCain, the GOP's presidential nominee in 2008, made a similar trip to Israel. A visit to Israel has traditionally been seen as a way to appeal to evangelical voters in the Republican base, and perhaps pick off Jewish voters who tend to favor Obama.

    A major donor to pro-Romney efforts, casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, has been a major proponent of Israel's, and has cited it as a motivation for defeating Obama this fall. Moreover, Romney has maintained a relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu both of them worked decades ago at Boston Consulting.

    Alex Moe and Michael O'Brien contributed

    203 comments

    On the road again with Willard! Lovely! He can go to Israel & hyperventilate over nothing of substance! A major donor to pro-Romney efforts, casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, has been a major proponent of Israel's,

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    Explore related topics: israel, mitt-romney, barack-obama, foreign-policy, first-read, barack-obam, decision-2012
  • 8
    May
    2012
    2:18pm, EDT

    Biden defends White House on Iran, Israel policy

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    Vice President Joe Biden on Tuesday vigorously defended the Obama administration's record on Israel, crediting President Obama for strengthening America's position in the region and for imposing "the most damaging sanctions in this century" to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

    "We were the problem," Biden said of the global view of the United States before the president took office. "We were diplomatically isolated in the world, in the region, in Europe. The international pressure on Iran was stuck in neutral."

    "We were neither fully respected by our friends nor feared by our opponents," he told guests at an annual convention of the Rabbinical Assembly. "Today it is starkly, starkly different."

    The vice president argued that Obama "deserves the credit" for coordinating harsh sanctions against Iran that he says are bringing that nation's negotiators back to the table, although he warned that the time for diplomacy may be waning.

    "The window has not closed in terms of the ability of the Israelis if they choose on their own to act militarily," he added, noting that he understood Israel's desire not to "contract out" its security to allies like the United States.

    Biden won sustained applause from the crowd by repeating that America does not have "a policy of containment" towards Iran. "We will prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon by whatever means needed, period. Period," he said.

    Citing dissension between Iran's own leaders, the vice president also predicted that stridently anti-Israel Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmedinijad will be forced from power within two years.

    He did not mention GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney by name, although the former Massachusetts governor's campaign later ripped his remarks about America's past isolation in the region as "wrong and completely inappropriate."

    "All too often, President Obama and his administration have sought to blame America first, yet Vice President Biden’s reckless statement today blaming America for – of all things – the progress of Iran’s nuclear weapons program, has reached a new low," said Romney policy director Lanhee Chen in a statement. "The problem is not America."

    Biden, who was elected to the Senate at age 30 and served at the helm of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, noted that his youth made him unique among his peers and offered him the opportunity to cultivate many mentors in the upper chamber. "I was the young kid. I was like the only woman or the only African-American," he said.

    The vice president, who has been in the spotlight for his comments Sunday in support of same sex marriage, did not mention the controversy on Tuesday, although he  alluded to his famous penchant for candor that occasionally his political allies.

    "No one's ever doubted I mean what I say," he said. "The problem is I sometimes say all that I mean."

    64 comments

    ....although he warned that the time for diplomacy may be waning. I don't like the sound of that, but I trust the administration to make the right call regarding Iran.

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    Explore related topics: israel, iran, mitt-romney, barack-obama, foreign-policy, joe-biden, first-read, decision-2012
  • 5
    Mar
    2012
    2:04pm, EST

    Obama talks tough toward Iran before meeting with Israeli PM

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg
    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    Before they began a closed-door, one-on-one meeting, President Obama told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the United States “will always have Israel’s back” when it comes to the nation’s security.

    The meeting in the Oval Office, which was to be followed by a lunch, came a day after the president addressed the annual gathering of AIPAC, the largest pro-Israel lobbying group, in which Obama assured the crowd that his policy toward Iran was to prevent it from obtaining a nuclear weapon, not “containment." Obama pointedly refused to rule out using military force to disrupt Iran's nuclear ambitions.

    Obama reiterated that statement today during remarks to the press before his private meeting with Netanyahu.

    “My policy is prevention of Iran obtaining nuclear weapons. And as I indicated yesterday in my speech, when I say all options are at the table, I mean it,” he said.

    The president also said, as he did Sunday, that the United States believes diplomatic efforts still have a chance of effectively dissuading Iran from pursuing nuclear weapons.

    “We do believe that there is still a window that allows for a diplomatic resolution to this issue, but ultimately the Iranians' regime has to make a decision to move in that direction, a decision that they have not made thus far.”

    While Iran’s nuclear aspirations are taking center stage this week, Obama also mentioned the ongoing conflict between Israel and their Palestinian neighbors, saying that he would discuss with Netanyahu the possibility of “a calmer set of discussions” between the two parties.

    “It is a very difficult thing to do in light of the context right now, but I know that the Prime Minister remains committed to trying to achieve that,” he said.

    Netanyahu, whose relationship with Obama was succinctly described by the president as “functional”in an interview last week, thanked Obama for the “strong” speech at AIPAC the day before.

    He emphasized that the security interests of the United States and Israel are intertwined, given that Iran views them both as Western adversaries.

    “For them, you're the Great Satan, we're the Little Satan.  For them, we are you and you're us. And you know something, Mr. President -- at least on this last point, I think they're right. We are you, and you are us. We're together,” Netanyahu said.

    Netanyahu is expected to address AIPAC at the group’s gala event this evening.

    222 comments

    Hold the phone. . . Did not Obama already offer the Iranians the once-in-a-lifetime chance at an actual, one on one, in person, meeting with himself? And did not the Iranians, rather than swoon, simply laugh hysterically at the ego of this moron? Oh, yeah, Obama's doing a great job on Iran.

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    Explore related topics: israel, white-house, barack-obama, national-security
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