Baltimore Sun

Graham enters 2016 race, stressing peril facing U.S.

- By Bill Barrow

CENTRAL, S.C. — South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham opened his campaign for the Republican presidenti­al nomination Monday with a grim accounting of radical Islam “running wild” in a world also imperiled by Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

He dedicated himself to defeating U.S. adversarie­s — a commitment that would place thousands of troops back in Iraq.

“I’ve got one simple message,” he told supporters in the small town where he grew up. “I have more experience with our national security than any other candidate in this race. That includes you, Hillary.”

In that fashion, he took on Democratic candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton — the former secretary of state — as well as noninterve­ntionists in his own party and rivals with little to no foreign policy experience.

Graham, 59, becomes the first candidate in either party to hail from one of the first four states that cast presidenti­al primary ballots. Iowa and New Hampshire lead the process, followed by South Carolina and Nevada.

Having won his third term in November, Graham is a prominent Senate voice in seeking a more muscular foreign policy and one who casts the threats facing the United States in particular­ly dark terms.

“Simply put, radical Islam is running wild,” he said. “They have more safe havens, more money, more weapons and more capability to strike our homeland than any time since 9/11. They are large, they are rich, and they’re entrenched.”

He said that as president, he’d “make them small, poor and on the run.”

“I’m afraid some Americans have grown tired of fighting them,” he said. “I have bad news to share with you — the radical Islamists are not tired of fighting you.”

Despite his focus on Islamic State militants with footholds in Iraq and Syria, Graham said Iran poses the gravest threat.

If the U.S. does not head off a nuclear capability in Iran, Graham said, “Iran will trigger a nuclear arms race in the least stable region on earth, and make it more likely that people who aspire to genocide will have the most effective means to commit it.”

His approach contrasts with that of presidenti­al candidate Rand Paul, a Republican senator from Kentucky who favors less military interventi­on. And his blunt talk about more troops and casualties stands out even among other Republican contenders who promise to quash Islamic State militants, but sidestep details.

Polls suggest a majority of American adults support military action against the group. But support drops when respondent­s are asked specifical­ly about a ground war.

Graham came to Congress an outspoken member of the conservati­ve freshman class that brought Re- publicans a majority in 1994. Yet he has since joined with Democrats onsomecont­entious votes. He backed a 2012 immigratio­n overhaul and voted to end a 2013 partial government shutdown. He also backed President Barack Obama’s two Supreme Court nominees.

That earned Graham enmity among some Republican­s, but he said Monday his willingnes­s to “work with anybody” is necessary. Graham said wealthier members of his generation will have to take fewer Social Security and Medicare benefits, while younger workers may have to work longer and pay more.

“We have to fix entitlemen­t programs to make sure people who need the benefits the most receive them,” he said.

Graham leaned heavily on his personal story Monday, delivering his speech in front of the building where he grew up and his parents ran a pool hall, bar and restaurant. Graham’s parents died when he was in college, leaving him as guardian to his then 13year-old sister, Darline.

“We depended on Social Security benefits to survive,” Graham said. “As president, I’ll gladly dowhat it takes to save a program that once saved my family.”

 ?? RAINIER EHRHARDT/AP ?? Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., arrives Monday at an event in Central, S.C., to announce his bid for the presidency.
RAINIER EHRHARDT/AP Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., arrives Monday at an event in Central, S.C., to announce his bid for the presidency.

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