Republican Presidential Candidate, Donald
Trump called U.S. President Barack Obama and Democratic candidate Hillary
Clinton "co-founders" of Islamic State on Thursday, igniting fresh
criticism of his inflammatory campaign style.
The New
York real estate developer has previously attacked Obama and Clinton, secretary
of state from 2009-13, for how the United States pulled out of Iraq after the
war, saying it helped create the militant Islamist group that has seized swaths
of Iraq and Syria.
The idea
that a sitting U.S. president created a militant group determined to kill
Americans and other Westerners took that line of attack to a new level. Trump
first made the assertion in a speech Wednesday night in Florida. He repeated it
in an interview Thursday morning with CNBC.
Recent
opinion polls have shown Trump losing ground to Clinton, a former U.S. senator
and first lady, in the race for the Nov. 8 election. An average of polls by
RealClearPolitics has Clinton 7.7 percentage points ahead, at 48 percent to his
40.3 percent.
"He
(Obama) was the founder of ISIS. And so was she. I mean I call them
co-founders," said Trump, who says he opposed the Iraq war. "He
shouldn't have gotten out way he got out. It was a disaster, what he did,"
he told CNBC.
Obama had
opposed the Iraq war and campaigned for the White House in 2008 on a promise to
end it. The United States pulled out combat troops in 2011.
Islamic
State in Iraq and Syria, also known as ISIS or ISIL, had its roots in the al
Qaeda insurgency that arose after the United States led an invasion of Iraq in
2003. Known for its brutality, the group in 2014 declared an Islamic caliphate
in Syria and Iraq, where fighting continues to rage.
Clinton
spokesman Jesse Lehrich, in response to Trump's comments, pointed to U.S.
advances against the militant group in Libya this week. "FYI – U.S.-backed
militias retook ISIS's stronghold in Libya today, thanks to Obama-authorized
air strikes," he said in a tweet late on Wednesday.
Trump did
not back down, asking on CNBC: "Is there something wrong with saying that?
Why - are people complaining that I said he was the founder of ISIS? All I do
is tell the truth, I'm a truth teller."
Supporters
of Trump, who has never held elected office, like his combative and often
insulting style but it has drawn wide criticism, not just from the Clinton
campaign. Many Republicans have urged him to change tactics and focus on the
economy.
U.S.
Representative Sean Duffy, a Republican from Wisconsin who backs Trump, said Obama
and Clinton did not found Islamic State and urged Trump to stay on message.
"Stay
on script. Don't go off script. Read your teleprompter and you're going to be
fine," Duffy said on MSNBC.
Trump
bristles at the notion he should change. "I don't think I've made too many
errors," he told CNBC. If his style costs him the election in 90 days, he
goes back to a good life, he said.
"It's
not what I'm looking to do - I think we're going to have a victory but we'll
see," Trump added.
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