Barack Obama rejects Joe Biden's 'test' prediction as candidates squabble over national security
By TODD J. GILLMAN and WAYNE SLATER / The Dallas Morning News
[email protected] [email protected] RICHMOND, Va. — Barack Obama on Wednesday rejected his own running mate’s prediction that enemies would go out of their way to “test” him soon after he takes office, as he and rival John McCain wrestled with a disturbing report suggesting that terrorists are rooting for the Republican.
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“Whoever is the next president is going to have to deal with a whole host of challenges internationally — and a period of transition in a new administration is always one in which we have to be vigilant,” Mr. Obama said in Richmond, flanked by national security advisers to signal his readiness to cope with whatever crises might come.
Switching gears from the economy — his favorite campaign topic lately — Mr. Obama addressed for the first time Joe Biden’s assertion last weekend that within six months, adversaries will provoke an international crisis “to test the mettle of this man.”
Republicans have latched on to the statement, arguing that electing Mr. Obama could invite attack. In Ohio, Mr. McCain cited the statement as he stepped up criticism of Mr. Obama.
“I will not be a president who needs to be tested. I have been tested, Sen. Obama hasn’t,” Mr. McCain told supporters in Green, Ohio. “The next president won’t have time to get used to office.”
Mr. Obama rejected his running mate’s language but embraced his larger point.
“Joe sometimes engages in rhetorical flourishes, but I think that his core point is that the next administration’s going to be tested regardless of who it is,” Mr. Obama said, thanks to wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, “an economy in free-fall,” and a host of “bad policies” by the current president.
McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds chided Mr. Obama for trying to shrug off the concerns Mr. Biden voiced. “Joe Biden ‘guaranteed’ a generated international crisis if Barack Obama is elected, and a smile-for-the-cameras press conference isn’t going to mitigate the risk of an Obama presidency,” he said. Mr. McCain spent the day defending states President Bush won, New Hampshire and Ohio. Mr. Obama was vying for Virginia, which hasn’t voted for a Democrat since Lyndon Johnson in 1964 — reflecting Mr. Obama’s surge in the polls.
The Democrat spent an hour or so in private with national security advisers, among them former U.N. Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, former Navy Secretary Richard Danzig and former Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia. He said afterward that he decided to convene the briefing two or three weeks ago to ensure that he kept up to speed on international issues despite the crush of politicking and the campaign’s focus on domestic problems.
It marked the second day in a row that Mr. Obama surrounded himself with elder statesmen to signal a readiness to lead. In Florida on Monday, he led a discussion on the economy with former Fed chairman Paul Volcker and Google chairman Eric Schmidt.
But his focus wasn’t entirely on foreign policy as he stumped in Virginia, where Democrats see a strong chance to snap their 44-year losing streak.
Mr. Obama stepped up his rebuttal to allegations that his plan to roll back Bush-era tax cuts would hurt middle-class taxpayers and mark a shift toward socialism.
“It’s not a very plausible argument,” Mr. Obama told reporters in Richmond, reiterating that Mr. McCain had opposed a proposal that skewed tax cuts to the wealthiest. “Was he a socialist back in 2000 when he opposed the Bush tax cuts?”
He took Mr. McCain on sternly at a rally in Richmond with Gov. Tim Kaine and former Gov. Mark Warner, who is running for the Senate.
“He’s not fighting for Joe the Plumber. He’s fighting for Joe the Hedge Fund Manager,” Mr. Obama declared. “John McCain likes to talk about Joe the Plumber, but he’s in cahoots with Joe the CEO. So don’t be fooled.”
Both candidates kept attention on the ailing economy. Mr. McCain, in New Hampshire, repeated criticism of Mr. Obama's tax plan. But much of the day’s squabbling focused on national security.
The McCain campaign vigorously denounced a report in the Washington Post that al Qaeda Web sites reflect “support for McCain.”
Former CIA Director Jim Woolsey, a McCain adviser, said the account the account relied on a blogger whose connections to al Qaeda were dubious.
“It’s ridiculous to believe that in its heart of hearts, al Qaeda wants John McCain to be president,” he said. “It’s ludicrous.”
McCain chief foreign policy adviser Randy Scheunemann said Mr. Obama’s willingness to meet with enemies without preconditions, and statements of praise for Mr. Obama from a Hamas leader and Libya’s leader could lead to the opposite conclusion, though he wouldn’t directly assert that terrorists preferred Mr. Obama. But he did argue that some Obama policies — in particular, early withdrawal from Iraq — would benefit terrorists. “Al Qaeda would certainly celebrate our defeat in Iraq.”
Todd J. Gillman reported from Virginia. Wayne Slater reported from New Hampshire and Ohio
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/politics/national/stories/102308dnpolcrises.13b5771b0.html