Republicans 2012: National security focus at TV debate

 

The possibility of almost $1tn of defence and domestic spending cuts was criticised by former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Texas Governor Rick Perry (Footage courtesy of CNN)

The eight Republican presidential hopefuls have traded blows on national security at a wide-ranging debate in Washington DC.

Before an audience of foreign policy experts, candidates were probed on domestic and foreign issues including defence cuts, Iran and border security.

The latest debate put former House Speaker Newt Gingrich in the spotlight after a recent surge in opinion polls.

The first Republican nominating contest will be on 3 January 2012 in Iowa.

Mr Gingrich is the latest in a series of Republican contenders to join former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney at the top of the polls.

Analysts say the conservative Republican base is dissatisfied with the prospect of Mitt Romney as their nominee, and has been searching instead for a known conservative candidate capable of taking on Barack Obama in November 2012.

With few of the candidates boasting significant foreign policy experience, the latest debate offered a new challenge for the leading contenders.

Start Quote

Real, substantial differences between the candidates were exposed. There was something of a sorting of the grown ups from the kids”

End Quote

Mr Romney criticised the defence cuts triggered by the failure to reach a deficit-reduction deal and mounted a strong defence of Israel, while Mr Gingrich and Texas Governor Rick Perry both spoke out on the emotive issue of immigration.

Ron Paul - a consistent anti-war voice - called for an end to US military adventures overseas, and former China ambassador Jon Huntsman, trailing in the polls but with with foreign policy experience, said troop levels in Afghanistan should be cut quickly.

Mr Huntsman found more speaking opportunities than usual, but Herman Cain, a confident voice on domestic economic issues, was less prominent than in recent debates.

'Too nuclear to fail'

The likelihood of almost $1tn of defence and domestic spending cuts, now in prospect after Congress' failure to reach a deficit deal, was roundly criticised by most candidates.

Mr Romney said the potential costs of Mr Obama's healthcare bill matched the level of cuts to the Pentagon budget.

L-R: Mitt Romney, Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich

"We need to protect America and protect our troops and our military and stop the idea of Obamacare," he declared.

Mr Perry, once seen as Mr Romney's chief rival but whose campaign gaffes have seen him lose support, said Defence Secretary Leon Panetta should resign in protest at the cuts his department could face.

Mr Gingrich, though, took a contrasting view. "It's clear that there are some things you can do to defence that are less expensive," he said.

On Pakistan, Mr Perry and Michele Bachmann sparred over US involvement with Islamabad.

Mr Perry said he would "not send them a penny" as the country has shown the US "time after time they can't be trusted".

Ms Bachmann cautiously said she would continue sending aid to Pakistan, because they were still sharing intelligence. Pakistan, Ms Bachmann said, was "too nuclear to fail".

But Mr Romney described Pakistan as being in need of urgent development. "We need to bring Pakistan into the 21st Century - heck, into the 20th Century."

Afghan pullout debate

There were few sharp exchanges between candidates in the debate, which was staged and moderated by CNN.

In a rare back and forth, Mr Huntsman and Mr Romney argued about the planned US troop drawdown in Afghanistan.

Start Quote

We need to bring Pakistan into the 21st Century - heck, into the 20th Century”

End Quote Mitt Romney Former Massachusetts governor

Mr Huntsman said US troops should come home sooner than planned, with some acting as trainers to the Afghan army and a "drone presence" maintained in the country.

Mr Romney disagreed, arguing that leaving Afghanistan early would leave it open to more violence. The two former governors also argued over the president's role as commander-in-chief.

On Iran, Mr Gingrich said Tehran's leaders could be gone within a year if fuel supply to the government was restricted. A peaceful change of government in Iran would be vastly preferable to a war or military strikes, he said.

Mr Romney also said that his first international trip as president would be to Israel, to show US support for its long-term Middle Eastern ally.

On the question of the Arab Spring, Mr Huntsman said the US "did itself a dis-service" by acting too soon in Libya.

"Our interests in the Middle East is Israel and preventing from Iran from going nuclear," he said.

Mr Perry, who declared support for a no-fly zone over Syria earlier in the day, appeared to soften his line somewhat, saying it was just one of several actions that could be taken against the Assad regime.

 

More on This Story

Republican primary race 2012

Related Stories

Comments

Jump to comments pagination
 
 

Comments 5 of 55

 

More US & Canada stories

RSS

Features & Analysis

Elsewhere on BBC News

  • An elderly Indian's feet and walking stickHome alone

    Faced with shrinking families and little state support, India's middle class confronts its retirement fears

Programmes

  • HampiFast Track Watch

    Seven hours from Bangalore – the extravagant ruins of the lost Indian empire of Vijayanagar

bbc.co.uk navigation

BBC © 2011 The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.