Chattanooga Times Free Press

Setting the stage

- BY LAURIE KELLMAN AND JILL COLVIN

Technician­s prepare the stage on the day before the presidenti­al debate between Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y. The 90-minute debate will start at 9 p.m. EDT tonight.

NEW YORK — Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump were meeting separately with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Sunday, giving each candidate fresh bragging rights about their knowledge of foreign policy and readiness to lead the nation on the eve of their first presidenti­al debate.

Trump and Netanyahu discussed “at length” Israel’s use of a fence to help secure its borders, an example Trump frequently cites when he’s talking about the wall he wants to build between the U.S. and Mexico.

“Trump recognized that Israel and its citizens have suffered far too long on the front lines of Islamic terrorism,” the campaign said in a statement. “He agreed with Prime Minister Netanyahu that the Israeli people want a just and lasting peace with their neighbors, but that peace will only come when the Palestinia­ns renounce hatred and violence and accept Israel as a Jewish State.”

Democratic presidenti­al nominee Clinton said a “strong and secure Israel” is vital to the United States. Her comment came after she met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in New York City on Sunday evening.

Reporters were barred from covering the meeting. Clinton’s campaign said in a statement released afterward that she “reaffirmed her unwavering commitment” to the U. S.- Israel relationsh­ip. Clinton also stressed her support for the new military aid agreement reached earlier in September and her commitment to countering efforts to boycott Israel.

The meetings were designed to put Israel on good footing with the next U. S. president. But they also served to showcase the candidates’ expertise in foreign policy in the shadow of their first debate today, six weeks before Election Day. Clinton, a former senator and secretary of state, often says Trump does not know enough about the world and lacks the temperamen­t to be president. Trump has argued he has extensive experience with foreign policy through his career as a business executive and blames Clinton for many of the nation’s stumbles in foreign policy.

Meanwhile, the candidates deployed their top supporters to the Sunday shows to take early jabs at their opponents and lower expectatio­ns for a showdown expected to draw 75 million viewers.

Facts and who will determine them during the 90-minute debate seemed to be a top concern of the campaigns’ strategist­s given Trump’s habit of saying things that are untrue and the public’s general distrust of Clinton.

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