Appearing Sunday morning on NBC’s “Meet the Press”, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton dealt gingerly with her Iraq War vote as she responded to a question about whether the American invasion thirteen years ago set the stage for the rise of ISIS.
“Well, I think that’s a hard conclusion to draw, because remember we had al Qaeda before we had ISIS,” Clinton said. Clinton added that al Qaeda had, by the start of the Iraq War in 2003, already launched 9/11 and before that had attacked U.S. embassies in Africa.
Pressed on whether the violence that followed the American removal of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein could be tied to the conditions that gave rise to ISIS, Clinton held firm.
“I think that’s a lot of jumps in logic that to me doesn’t really add up,” Clinton said. “The Iraq War, there’s no doubt, contributed to instability. I’m not going to in any way deny that. But you cannot draw a direct line.”
The remarks underscore trouble that Clinton continues to have addressing her 2002 vote as the U.S. senator from New York authorizing the Iraq War.
Clinton has in the past argued that ISIS was given rise out of sectarian tension stoked by Iraq’s former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki after U.S. troops left the country in 2011. Maliki, a Shiite, purged the government of prominent Sunnis, sparking unrest among Sunnis. Clinton has said ISIS recognized a vacuum and stepped in.
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This is true, in part. But as a former secretary of state, Clinton likely also knows how closely the Iraq War itself is tied to ISIS, no matter how directly or indirectly one wants to trace that line. Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of ISIS, spent time in a U.S. prison in Iraq, where he mixed with other jihadists and, by the accounts of experts and witnesses, hardened his outlook and sharpened his craft.









