The Jerusalem Post

Obama defends record on terrorism in last major national security speech

Instead of making false promises that we can eliminate terrorism, we have to take long view of threat, president says after 14 years of war

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President Barack Obama warned that the US would not be able to wipe out terrorism with military might, as he offered a sweeping defense of his administra­tion’s national security record.

In his final major speech on counterter­rorism as president, Obama argued on Tuesday that his administra­tion had been able to make al-Qaida a shadow of its former self and had put Islamic State on its heels, but said terrorism would remain a threat to the United States.

“Rather than offer false promises that we can eliminate terrorism by dropping more bombs or deploying more and more troops or fencing ourselves off from the rest of the world, we have to take a long view of the terrorist threat and we have to pursue a smart strategy that can be sustained,” Obama said during a speech at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida.

Obama will turn over the White House on January 20 to Republican President-elect Donald Trump, who has been sharply critical of his administra­tion’s approach to fighting terrorism.

Trump referred to Obama and Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton as the “co-founders” of Islamic State during the presidenti­al campaign, blaming them for the initial spread of the terrorist group.

The White House said Obama’s national security speech had been planned long before the November 8 election and was not aimed specifical­ly at the incoming Trump administra­tion.

But during his speech, Obama spoke of the importance of adhering to American laws and values and against reinstatin­g the use of waterboard­ing or imposing a religious test on immigrants, two positions that Trump has supported in the past.

“The whole objective of these terrorists is to scare us into changing who we are and our democracy,” Obama said.

Obama signed an executive order after taking office in January 2009 that banned waterboard­ing and other “enhanced interrogat­ion techniques.” Such executive orders can be rescinded by a president’s successors.

Many lawmakers and human rights groups have denounced waterboard­ing, an interrogat­ion technique that simulates drowning, as torture.

While Trump is now calling for “extreme vetting” of certain refugees admitted to the United States, during the campaign he proposed banning foreign-born Muslims from entering the country. Obama said that runs counter to US values.

“The United States of America is not a place where some citizens have to withstand greater scrutiny or carry a special ID card or prove that they are not an enemy from within,” he told military personnel gathered there. “We’re a country that has bled and struggled and sacrificed against that kind of discrimina­tion and arbitrary rule.”

Obama came into office planning to unwind US wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n and promising to focus on fighting terrorist groups that threatened the United States wherever they were.

Instead, he has been forced to return some US troops to Iraq and keep thousands in place in Afghanista­n after more than 14.5 years of war.

Obama said his administra­tion’s approach of providing support to local partners and not undertakin­g massive ground invasions has been effective and is making progress in the fight to take Mosul in Iraq from Islamic State. (Reuters)

 ?? (Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Barack Obama speaks about counterter­rorism at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida, on Tuesday.
(Reuters) US PRESIDENT Barack Obama speaks about counterter­rorism at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida, on Tuesday.

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